The All-sky Impact of the LMC on the Milky Way Circumgalactic Medium

Christopher Carr, Greg L. Bryan, Nicolás Garavito-Camargo, Gurtina Besla, David J. Setton, Kathryn V. Johnston, Kung Yi Su

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1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The first infall of the LMC into the Milky Way (MW) represents a large and recent disruption to the MW circumgalactic medium (CGM). In this work, we use idealized, hydrodynamical simulations of an MW-like CGM embedded in a dark matter halo with an infalling LMC-like satellite initialized with its own CGM to understand how the encounter is shaping the global physical and kinematic properties of the MW CGM. First, we find that the LMC drives order-unity enhancements in MW CGM density, temperature, and pressure due to a M ≈ 2 shock from the supersonic CGM-CGM collision. The resulting shock front extends from the LMC to beyond ∼R200,MW, amplifying column densities, X-ray brightness, thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich distortion, and potentially synchrotron emission from cosmic rays over large angular scales across the southern hemisphere. Second, the MW’s reflex motion relative to its outer halo induces a dipole in CGM radial velocities, with vR ± 30-50 km s−1 at R > 50 kpc in the northern and southern hemispheres, respectively, consistent with measurements in the stellar halo. Finally, ram pressure strips most of the LMC’s CGM, leaving ∼108−9M warm ionized gas along the past orbit of the LMC, moving at high radial and/or tangential velocities ∼50-100 kpc from the MW. Massive satellites like the LMC leave their mark on the CGM structure of their host galaxies, and signatures of such interactions may be observable in key all-sky tracers of the MW CGM and those of other massive galaxies.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number151
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume983
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 20 2025

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Space and Planetary Science

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