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Article Dans Une Revue Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Année : 2015

Planes of satellite galaxies and the cosmic web

Résumé

Recent observational studies have demonstrated that most satellite galaxies tend to orbit their hosts on highly flattened, vast, possibly co-rotating planes. Two nearly parallel planes of satellites have been confirmed around the M31 galaxy and around the Centaurus A galaxy, while the Milky Way also sports a plane of satellites. It has been argued that such an alignment of satellites on vast planes is unexpected in the standard ($\Lambda$CDM) model of cosmology if not even in contradiction to its generic predictions. Guided by $\Lambda$CDM numerical simulations, which suggest that satellites are channeled towards hosts along the axis of the slowest collapse as dictated by the ambient velocity shear tensor, we re-examine the planes of local satellites systems within the framework of the local shear tensor derived from the Cosmicflows-2 dataset. The analysis reveals that the Local Group and Centaurus A reside in a filament stretched by the Virgo cluster and compressed by the expansion of the Local Void. Four out of five thin planes of satellite galaxies are indeed closely aligned with the axis of compression induced by the Local Void. Being the less massive system, the moderate misalignment of the Milky Way's satellite plane can likely be ascribed to its greater susceptibility to tidal torques, as suggested by numerical simulations. The alignment of satellite systems in the local universe with the ambient shear field is thus in agreement with predictions of the $\Lambda$CDM model.

Dates et versions

in2p3-01139976 , version 1 (07-04-2015)

Identifiants

Citer

Noam I. Libeskind, Yehuda Hoffman, R. Brent Tully, Helene M. Courtois, Daniel Pomarède, et al.. Planes of satellite galaxies and the cosmic web. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2015, 452 (1), pp.1052. ⟨10.1093/mnras/stv1302⟩. ⟨in2p3-01139976⟩
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