Reexamination of the Possible Tidal Stream in Front of the Large Magellanic Cloud

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Published 1998 November 10 © 1998. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Rodrigo A. Ibata et al 1998 ApJ 509 L29 DOI 10.1086/311749

1538-4357/509/1/L29

Abstract

It has recently been suggested that the stars in a vertical extension of the red clump feature seen in LMC color-magnitude diagrams could belong to a tidal stream of material located in front of that galaxy. If this claim is correct, this foreground concentration of stars could contribute significantly to the rate of gravitational microlensing events observed in the LMC microlensing experiments. Here we present radial velocity measurements of stars in this so-called "vertical red clump" (VRC) population. The observed stellar sample, it transpires, has typical LMC kinematics. It is shown that it is improbable that an intervening tidal stream should have the same distribution of radial velocities as the LMC, which is consistent with an earlier study that shows that the VRC feature is more likely a young stellar population in the main body of that galaxy. However, the kinematic data do not discriminate against the possibility that the VRC is an LMC halo population.

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10.1086/311749