7–11 Jul 2025
Teaching and Learning Centre (TLC)
Europe/London timezone

Dynamical streams in the local stellar halo

11 Jul 2025, 15:07
13m
Teaching and Learning Centre (TLC)

Teaching and Learning Centre (TLC)

Durham University South Road Durham DH1 3LS
Talk Revealing the Milky Way with Gaia: Focus on Galactic dynamics in the Gaia era and beyond Revealing the Milky Way with Gaia: Focus on Galactic dynamics in the Gaia era and beyond

Description

Co-moving groups of stars (streams) are well known in the velocity space of the disc near the Sun. Many are thought to arise from resonances with the Galactic bar or spiral arms. In this work, we search for similar moving groups in the velocity space of the halo, at low angular momentum. From the asymmetry of the radial velocity distribution $v_R$, we identify two inward-moving streams with $v_R<0$ and small $|v_\phi|$. These are projections of the 'chevrons' previously discovered in radial phase space $(R,v_R)$. A test particle simulation in a realistic Milky Way potential with a decelerating bar naturally produces analogues of these features, and they are observed across a wide range of metallicity. They are therefore very likely to be dynamical streams created by trapping in the bar's resonances. Specifically, they occupy regions of phase space where orbits are trapped in the corotation and outer Lindblad resonances respectively. By tracing these streams across a range of radii in $(R,v_R)$ space, we fit resonant orbits to their tracks in a flexible potential with variable bar pattern speed. This allows us to simultaneously constrain the mass profile of the Milky Way for $r\lesssim20$ kpc and the pattern speed $\Omegab$. We estimate the mass enclosed within $r=20$ kpc to be $M_{20}=(2.17\pm0.21)\times10^{11}M_\odot$, and the pattern speed to be $\Omega_\mathrm{b}=31.9_{-1.9}^{+1.8}$ km/s/kpc. Our fitted potential is in excellent agreement with previous results, while we favour a slightly slower pattern speed than most recent estimates.

Primary author

Adam Dillamore (UCL)

Co-authors

Jason Sanders (University College London) Vasily Belokurov (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge) Mr Hanyuan Zhang (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge)

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