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The Magellanic Stream and Debris Clouds

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 Added by Bi-Qing For
 Publication date 2014
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We present a study of the discrete clouds and filaments in the Magellanic Stream using a new high-resolution survey of neutral hydrogen (HI) conducted with H75 array of the Australia Telescope Compact Array, complemented by single-dish data from the Parkes Galactic All-Sky Survey (GASS). From the individual and combined datasets, we have compiled a catalog of 251 clouds and list their basic parameters, including a morphological description useful for identifying cloud interactions. We find an unexpectedly large number of head-tail clouds in the region. The implication for the formation mechanism and evolution is discussed. The filaments appear to originate entirely from the Small Magellanic Cloud and extend into the northern end of the Magellanic Bridge.



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81 - F. Hammer 2015
We have analyzed the Magellanic Stream (MS) using the deepest and the most resolved H I survey of the Southern Hemisphere (the Galactic All-Sky Survey). The overall Stream is structured into two filaments, suggesting two ram-pressure tails lagging behind the Magellanic Clouds (MCs), and resembling two close, transonic, von Karman vortex streets. The past motions of the Clouds appear imprinted in them, implying almost parallel initial orbits, and then a radical change after their passage near the N(H I) peak of the MS. This is consistent with a recent collision between the MCs, $200-300$ Myr ago, which has stripped their gas further into small clouds, spreading them out along a gigantic bow shock, perpendicular to the MS. The Stream is formed by the interplay between stellar feedback and the ram pressure exerted by hot gas in the Milky Way (MW) halo with $rho_{hot}$= $10^{-4}$ $cm^{-3}$ at 50-70 kpc, a value necessary to explain the MS multiphase high-velocity clouds. The corresponding hydrodynamic modeling provides the currently most accurate reproduction of the whole H I Stream morphology, of its velocity, and column density profiles along $L_{MS}$. The ram pressure plus collision scenario requires tidal dwarf galaxies, which are assumed to be the Cloud and dSph progenitors, to have left imprints in the MS and the Leading Arm, respectively. The simulated LMC and SMC have baryonic mass, kinematics and proper motions consistent with observations. This supports a novel paradigm for the MS System, which could have its origin in material expelled toward the MW by the ancient gas-rich merger that formed M31.
The dominant gaseous structure in the Galactic halo is the Magellanic Stream, an extended network of neutral and ionized filaments surrounding the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC/SMC), the two most massive satellite galaxies of the Milky Way. Recent observations indicate that the Clouds are on their first passage around our Galaxy, the Stream is made up of gas stripped from both the LMC and the SMC, and the majority of this gas is ionized. While it has long been suspected that tidal forces and ram-pressure stripping contributed to the Streams formation, a full understanding of its origins has defied modelers for decades. Several recent developments, including the discovery of dwarf galaxies associated with the Magellanic Group, the high mass of the LMC, the detection of highly ionized gas toward stars in the LMC and the predictions of cosmological simulations all support the existence of a halo of warm ionized gas around the LMC at a temperature of $sim5times10^{5};mathrm{K}$. Here we show that by including this Magellanic Corona in hydrodynamic simulations of the Magellanic Clouds falling onto the Galaxy, we can simultaneously reproduce the Stream and its Leading Arm. Our simulations explain the Streams filamentary structure, spatial extent, radial velocity gradient, and total ionized gas mass. We predict that the Magellanic Corona will be unambiguously observable via high-ionization absorption lines in the ultraviolet spectra of background quasars lying near the LMC. This prediction is directly testable with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope.
70 - Elena DOnghia 2015
The Magellanic Clouds are surrounded by an extended network of gaseous structures. Chief among these is the Magellanic Stream, an interwoven tail of filaments trailing the Clouds in their orbit around the Milky Way. When considered in tandem with its Leading Arm, the Stream stretches over 200 degrees on the sky. Thought to represent the result of tidal interactions between the Clouds and ram-pressure forces exerted by the Galactic corona, its kinematic properties reflect the dynamical history of the closest pair of dwarf galaxies to the Milky Way. The Stream is a benchmark for hydrodynamical simulations of accreting gas and cloud/corona interactions. If the Stream survives these interactions and arrives safely in the Galactic disk, its cargo of over a billion solar masses of gas has the potential to maintain or elevate the Galactic star formation rate. In this article, we review the current state of knowledge of the Stream, including its chemical composition, physical conditions, origin, and fate. We also review the dynamics of the Magellanic System, including the proper motions and orbital history of the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, the first-passage and second-passage scenarios, and the evidence for a Magellanic Group of galaxies.
The Magellanic Stream and the Leading Arm form a massive, filamentary system of gas clouds surrounding the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. Here we present a new component-level analysis of their ultraviolet (UV) kinematic properties using a sample of 31 sightlines through the Magellanic System observed with the Hubble Space Telescope/Cosmic Origins Spectrograph. Using Voigt profile fits to UV metal-line absorption, we quantify the kinematic differences between the low-ion (Si II and C II), intermediate-ion (Si III), and high-ion (Si IV and C IV) absorption lines and compare the kinematics between the Stream and Leading Arm. We find that the Stream shows generally simple, single-phase kinematics, with statistically indistinguishable b-value distributions for the low-, intermediate-, and high-ion components, all dominated by narrow (b<25 km/s) components that are well aligned in velocity. In contrast, we find tentative evidence that the Leading Arm shows complex, multi-phase kinematics, with broader high ions than low ions. These results suggest that the Stream is photoionized up to C IV by a hard ionizing radiation field. This can be naturally explained by the Seyfert-flare model of Bland-Hawthorn et al. (2013, 2019), in which a burst of ionizing radiation from the Galactic Center photoionized the Stream as it passed below the south Galactic pole. The Seyfert flare is the only known source of radiation that is both powerful enough to explain the H-alpha intensity of the Stream and hard enough to photoionize Si IV and C IV to the observed levels. The flares timescale of a few Myr suggests it is the same event that created the giant X-ray/gamma-ray Fermi Bubbles at the Galactic Center.
Extending for over 200 degrees across the sky, the Magellanic Stream together with its Leading Arm is the most spectacular example of a gaseous stream in the local Universe. The Stream is an interwoven tail of filaments trailing the Magellanic Clouds as they orbit the Milky Way. Thought to be created by tidal forces, ram pressure, and halo interactions, the Stream is a benchmark for dynamical models of the Magellanic System, a case study for gas accretion and dwarf-galaxy accretion onto galaxies, a probe of the outer halo, and the bearer of more gas mass than all other Galactic high velocity clouds combined. If it survives to reach the Galactic disk, it may maintain or even elevate the Galactic star-formation rate. In this white paper, we emphasize the Streams importance for many areas of Galactic astronomy, summarize key unanswered questions, and identify future observations and simulations needed to resolve them. We stress the importance of ultraviolet, optical, and radio spectroscopy, and the need for computational models that capture full particle and radiation treatments within an MHD environment.
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