3D kinematics of SMC star clusters: residual velocities disentangle kinematically perturbed clusters
Denis M. F. Illesca, Andrés E. Piatti, Matías Chiarpotti, Roberto Butrón
TLDR
This study uses residual velocities of 36 star clusters to identify tidally perturbed regions in the Small Magellanic Cloud, showing a clear kinematic separation.
Key contributions
- Analyzed 36 SMC star clusters using 3D kinematics to trace galactic behavior.
- Defined residual velocity (ΔV) by comparing observed velocities to a rotating disc model.
- Found ΔV increases with distance from SMC center, indicating tidal influence.
- Identified ΔV ≈ 60 km/s as a kinematic threshold for tidally perturbed regions.
Why it matters
Understanding the SMC's kinematic state is crucial for galaxy evolution models. This paper provides a novel method using star clusters and residual velocities to precisely map tidal perturbations. This helps differentiate between intrinsic motion and external forces shaping the galaxy.
Original Abstract
Understanding the kinematic behaviour of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) remains a challenge addressed by many authors using diverse approaches. Over time, increasing observational evidence has accumulated for tidal perturbations induced by the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) on the SMC, especially in its outer regions. In this study, we adopt star clusters as kinematic tracers of the SMC. We analyse 36 clusters distributed across the galaxy's structural regions (Northern Bridge, Southern Bridge, Wing/Bridge, West Halo, Main Body and Counter-Bridge). From each cluster's proper motions, radial velocity and heliocentric distance we estimate Cartesian velocities \((V_x,\,V_y,\,V_z)\) in the SMC reference frame. We also compute the same velocity components under the assumption that the SMC behaves as a rotating disc. We then define the residual velocity \(ΔV\) for each cluster as the difference between the two velocities derived. Additionally, we perform a kinematic anisotropy analysis to characterise the distribution of kinetic energy across the SMC. We find that increasing values of \(ΔV\) correlate with increasing cluster distance from the SMC center, and that \(ΔV \approx 60\ \mathrm{km\,s^{-1}}\) it appears to be a lower limit that separates, in kinematic terms, the areas of tidal origin from those with the best behavior.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.