Snails across Scales: Local and Global Phase-mixing Structures as Probes of the Past and Future Milky Way

Hogg, David W.; Laporte, Chervin F. P.; Price-Whelan, Adrian M.; Johnston, Kathryn V.; Hunt, Jason A. S.; Gandhi, Suroor S.

United States, Spain, Japan, Germany

Abstract

Signatures of vertical disequilibrium have been observed across the Milky Way's (MW's) disk. These signatures manifest locally as unmixed phase spirals in z-v z space ("snails-in-phase"), and globally as nonzero mean z and v z , wrapping around the disk into physical spirals in the x-y plane ("snails-in-space"). We explore the connection between these local and global spirals through the example of a satellite perturbing a test-particle MW-like disk. We anticipate our results to broadly apply to any vertical perturbation. Using a z-v z asymmetry metric, we demonstrate that in test-particle simulations: (a) multiple local phase-spiral morphologies appear when stars are binned by azimuthal action J ϕ , excited by a single event (in our case, a satellite disk crossing); (b) these distinct phase spirals are traced back to distinct disk locations; and (c) they are excited at distinct times. Thus, local phase spirals offer a global view of the MW's perturbation history from multiple perspectives. Using a toy model for a Sagittarius (Sgr)-like satellite crossing the disk, we show that the full interaction takes place on timescales comparable to orbital periods of disk stars within R ≲ 10 kpc. Hence such perturbations have widespread influence, which peaks in distinct regions of the disk at different times. This leads us to examine the ongoing MW-Sgr interaction. While Sgr has not yet crossed the disk (currently, z Sgr ≈ -6 kpc, v z,Sgr ≈ 210 km s-1), we demonstrate that the peak of the impact has already passed. Sgr's pull over the past 150 Myr creates a global v z signature with amplitude ∝ M Sgr, which might be detectable in future spectroscopic surveys.

2022 The Astrophysical Journal
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