The VMC survey -- XXXVIII. Proper motion of the Magellanic Bridge
Thomas Schmidt, Maria-Rosa L. Cioni, Florian Niederhofer, Kenji Bekki,, Cameron P. M. Bell, Richard de Grijs, Jonathan Diaz, Dalal El Youssoufi, Jim, Emerson, Martin A. T. Groenewegen, Valentin D. Ivanov, Gal Matijevic, Joana, M. Oliveira, Monika G. Petr-Gotzens

TL;DR
This study measures stellar proper motions in the Magellanic Bridge using VISTA and Gaia data, revealing a stretching flow from the Small to the Large Magellanic Cloud, which enhances understanding of their interaction and tidal features.
Contribution
It provides the first proper motion measurement of the Magellanic Bridge center and compares methods for foreground star removal, improving kinematic analysis of this tidal feature.
Findings
Proper motion of the Magellanic Bridge center is 1.80±0.25 mas/yr in RA and -0.72±0.13 mas/yr in Dec.
Confirmed flow motion from the Small to the Large Magellanic Cloud.
Indicates the Magellanic Bridge is stretching.
Abstract
The Magellanic Clouds are a nearby pair of interacting dwarf galaxies and satellites of the Milky Way. Studying their kinematic properties is essential to understanding their origin and dynamical evolution. They have prominent tidal features and the kinematics of these features can give hints about the formation of tidal dwarfs, galaxy merging and the stripping of gas. In addition they are an example of dwarf galaxies that are in the process of merging with a massive galaxy. The goal of this study is to investigate the kinematics of the Magellanic Bridge, a tidal feature connecting the Magellanic Clouds, using stellar proper motions to understand their most recent interaction. We calculated proper motions based on multi-epoch -band aperture photometry, which were obtained with the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA), spanning a time of 1-3 yr, and we…
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