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Paris, France (SPX) Nov 24, 2010 Did a major collision between two massive galaxies occur in the Local Group 6 billion years ago? Numerical simulations made by six researchers from Paris Observatory, CNRS, and NAOC suggest this. They find that our big neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy, as well as the Magellanic Clouds, may well have been formed during such a gigantic collision between two galaxies. Our neighborhood, the Local Group, includes nearly 40 galaxies and is dominated by two giant spiral galaxies: Andromeda (Messier 31) and our own galaxy, the Milky Way. Many astronomers believe that Andromeda may have been formed through the merger of two galaxies of smaller mass. When did such a major event occur, and what are the consequences to our neighborhood? The team led by Francois Hammer from Paris Observatory, which includes researchers from the National Astronomical Observatory of China (NAOC), modeled for the first time the detailed structural evolution of the Andromeda Galaxy. They were able to reproduce most of the peculiar properties of this galaxy: the large thin disk including its giant ring of gas and dust, the massive central bulge, the gigantic thick disk, the giant stream of old stars, as well as many other stellar streams discovered in the galaxy halo. They concluded that Andromeda may well be the result of the collision between two galaxies, one slightly more massive than the Milky Way, the other about three times less massive. The epoch of the event can be estimated from the observed stellar ages of the Andromeda structures: the first passage and the final fusion had occurred slightly less than 9 and 5.5 billion years ago, respectively.
The Birth of the Andromeda Galaxy Simulations also predict that an amount of mass equivalent to one third of that of the Milky Way could have been expelled during the interaction, through the formation of gigantic tidal tails. Most of this matter is expected to be dominated by gas. A large part of this matter is ejected in a privileged direction, including in a hyperplane oriented along the disk of the Andromeda Galaxy. Because the Andromeda disk is seen almost edge-on (inclination of 77 degrees), this hyperplane may easily include the Milky Way.
The Origin of the Magellanic Clouds As such, they would have been ejected towards the Milky Way, at a very large velocity that has been recently re-evaluated to be one million kilometers per hour (350 km/s)! This scenario may also explain why the Magellanic Clouds are the only gas-rich and irregular companions of the Milky Way. The researchers used the measured peculiar velocities of these galaxies to trace back their position several billion years ago, and they found many solutions for which they could originate from the Andromeda Galaxy. If confirmed, these results may have important consequences in cosmology, by supporting both the hypothesis that most spiral galaxies have been formed by mergers, and the prediction that many dwarf galaxies may originate from tidal tails during such events. "Does M31 result from an ancient major merger?", F. Hammer, Y. B. Yang, J.L. Wang, M. Puech, H. Flores and S. Fouquet, to be published 10 December 2010 in the Astrophysical Journal. "Could the Magellanic Clouds be tidal dwarves expelled from a past-merger event occurring in Andromeda?", Y. B. Yang and F. Hammer, published 20 November 2010 in Astrophysical Journal Letters.
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