On the origin of the asymmetric dwarf galaxy distribution around Andromeda
Zhen Wan, William H. Oliver, Geraint F. Lewis, Justin I. Read,, Michelle L. M. Collins

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origins of the asymmetric distribution of dwarf galaxies around Andromeda, analyzing orbital dynamics and initial conditions to explain observed anisotropies and their potential transient nature.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the orbital and initial conditions needed to produce the observed asymmetries, suggesting they may not originate from a single event or are short-lived.
Findings
Highly eccentric orbits are needed to maintain asymmetry.
Large initial associations can produce the observed structure.
Initial energy conditions are tightly constrained.
Abstract
The dwarf galaxy distribution surrounding M31 is significantly anisotropic in nature. Of the 30 dwarf galaxies in this distribution, 15 form a disc-like structure and 23 are contained within the hemisphere facing the Milky Way. Using a realistic local potential, we analyse the conditions required to produce and maintain these asymmetries. We find that some dwarf galaxies are required to have highly eccentric orbits in order to preserve the presence of the hemispherical asymmetry with an appropriately large radial dispersion. Under the assumption that the dwarf galaxies originate from a single association or accretion event, we find that the initial size and specific energy of that association must both be relatively large in order to produce the observed hemispherical asymmetry. However if the association was large in physical size, the very high-energy required would enable several…
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