TY - JOUR
T1 - Response of the LMC’s Bar to a Recent SMC Collision and Implications for the SMC’s Dark Matter Profile
AU - Rathore, Himansh
AU - Besla, Gurtina
AU - Daniel, Kathryne J.
AU - Beraldo e Silva, Leandro
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.
PY - 2025/7/20
Y1 - 2025/7/20
N2 - The LMC’s stellar bar is offset from the outer disk center, tilted from the disk plane, and does not drive gas inflows. These properties are atypical of bars in gas-rich galaxies, yet the LMC bar’s strength and radius are similar to typical barred galaxies. Using N-body hydrodynamic simulations, we show that the LMC’s unusual bar is explainable if there was a recent collision (impact parameter ≈2 kpc) between the LMC and SMC. Pre-collision, the simulated bar is centered and coplanar. Post-collision, the simulated bar is offset (≈1.5 kpc) and tilted (≈8 . ° 6). The simulated bar offset reduces with time, and comparing with the observed offset (≈0.8 kpc) suggests the timing of the true collision to be 150-200 Myr ago. Then, 150 Myr post-collision, the LMC’s bar is centered with its dark matter (DM) halo, whereas the outer disk center is separated from the DM center by ≈1 kpc. The SMC collision produces a tilted-ring structure for the simulated LMC, consistent with observations. Post-collision, the simulated LMC bar’s pattern speed decreases by a factor of 2. We also provide a generalizable framework to quantitatively compare the LMC’s central gas distribution in different LMC-SMC interaction scenarios. We demonstrate that the SMC’s torques on the LMC’s bar during the collision are sufficient to explain the observed bar tilt, provided the SMC’s total mass within 2 kpc was (0.8-2.4) × 109 M⊙. Therefore, the LMC bar’s tilt constrains the SMC’s pre-collision DM profile, and requires the SMC to be a DM-dominated galaxy.
AB - The LMC’s stellar bar is offset from the outer disk center, tilted from the disk plane, and does not drive gas inflows. These properties are atypical of bars in gas-rich galaxies, yet the LMC bar’s strength and radius are similar to typical barred galaxies. Using N-body hydrodynamic simulations, we show that the LMC’s unusual bar is explainable if there was a recent collision (impact parameter ≈2 kpc) between the LMC and SMC. Pre-collision, the simulated bar is centered and coplanar. Post-collision, the simulated bar is offset (≈1.5 kpc) and tilted (≈8 . ° 6). The simulated bar offset reduces with time, and comparing with the observed offset (≈0.8 kpc) suggests the timing of the true collision to be 150-200 Myr ago. Then, 150 Myr post-collision, the LMC’s bar is centered with its dark matter (DM) halo, whereas the outer disk center is separated from the DM center by ≈1 kpc. The SMC collision produces a tilted-ring structure for the simulated LMC, consistent with observations. Post-collision, the simulated LMC bar’s pattern speed decreases by a factor of 2. We also provide a generalizable framework to quantitatively compare the LMC’s central gas distribution in different LMC-SMC interaction scenarios. We demonstrate that the SMC’s torques on the LMC’s bar during the collision are sufficient to explain the observed bar tilt, provided the SMC’s total mass within 2 kpc was (0.8-2.4) × 109 M⊙. Therefore, the LMC bar’s tilt constrains the SMC’s pre-collision DM profile, and requires the SMC to be a DM-dominated galaxy.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011204345
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011204345#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.3847/1538-4357/ade0ae
DO - 10.3847/1538-4357/ade0ae
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105011204345
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 988
JO - Astrophysical Journal
JF - Astrophysical Journal
IS - 1
M1 - 79
ER -