The Andromeda galaxy is surrounded by a constellation of dwarf galaxies that are arranged in a highly lopsided manner. Analysis of cosmological simulations published in Nature Astronomy reveal that this degree of asymmetry is only found in 0.3% of similar systems, painting Andromeda as a striking outlier in the current cosmological paradigm
The spatial distribution of galaxies provides crucial insights into cosmology and dark matter physics. According to the standard cosmological model, small galaxies merge over time in a chaotic process to form larger ones, leaving behind swarms of faint dwarf galaxies that orbit massive host galaxies in an almost random arrangement. But new research at the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP) shows that the satellite galaxies of the neighbouring Andromeda galaxy (M31) have surprising and thus far unexplained properties.
Instead of being randomly spread around their host galaxy, as the standard model of cosmology predicts, over 80% of these dwarf galaxies are concentrated on one side of the Andromeda galaxy. A recent dataset of homogeneous distance measurements for 37 Andromeda satellites highlights this unexpected arrangement. Specifically, all but one of Andromeda’s satellites lie within lie within 107 degree of the line pointing towards the Milky Way, a region covering only 64% of the host galaxy’s surroundings. Until now, it was unclear whether this peculiar configuration significantly challenges the current cosmological model or falls within the range of cosmic variance.
„This asymmetry has persisted and even became more pronounced as fainter galaxies have been discovered and their distances refined,“ explains Mr. Kosuke Jamie Kanehisa, PhD student at the AIP and lead-author of the study. „Our analyses show that such a pattern is extremely rare in current cosmological simulations.“
Modern cosmological simulations, which track galaxy evolution over cosmic time, provide a valuable tool to predict and compare galaxy systems under the standard cosmological framework. „Using two prominent simulations, we searched for Andromeda-like host galaxies and analyzed the spatial distribution of their dwarf satellites using custom metrics to quantify asymmetry. Comparing Andromeda’s observed configuration to these simulated analogs revealed that its satellite distribution is extraordinarily rare," says Dr. Marcel S. Pawlowski from AIP. „We have to look at more than three hundred simulated systems to find just one that is similarly extreme in its asymmetry as observed." This makes Andromeda an extreme outlier, defying cosmological expectations.
Andromeda’s asymmetry becomes even more perplexing when combined with its other unusual feature: half of its satellites co-orbit in a thin, planar structure, reminiscent of planets orbiting the Sun. The coexistence of such a plane of satellite galaxies and a lopsided satellite distribution is highly unexpected in the standard cosmological model. This raises questions about whether Andromeda’s evolutionary history is uniquely anomalous or if our understanding of galaxy formation at small scales is incomplete.
Although these findings challenge current cosmological theories, they rely heavily on the accuracy of the underlying simulations, which are limited by how well they model stellar physics and galaxy evolution. The next steps involve determining whether Andromeda’s configuration is a unique outlier or if similarly anisotropic galaxy systems exist elsewhere. Efforts to study distant systems and search for comparable asymmetries are already underway, and next-generation surveys like Euclid will accelerate this search. Additionally, further analysis of Andromeda’s merger history will help determine if such extreme asymmetries can naturally arise in a dark matter-dominated universe—and why they remain absent in current simulations.
Kosuke Jamie Kanehisa, kkanehisa@aip.de
Dr. Marcel Pawlowski, 0331 7499 342, mpawlowski@aip.de
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-025-02480-3
https://www.aip.de/en/research/dwarf-galaxies/
The satellite galaxies of the Andromeda galaxy M31.
Kosuke Jamie Kanehisa, AIP
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