The accretion origin of the Milky Way's stellar halo
Eric F. Bell, Daniel B. Zucker, Vasily Belokurov, Sanjib Sharma,, Kathryn V. Johnston, James S. Bullock, David W. Hogg, Knud Jahnke, Jelte T., A. de Jong, Timothy C. Beers, N. W. Evans, Eva K. Grebel, Zeljko Ivezic,, Sergey E. Koposov, Hans-Walter Rix, Donald P. Schneider

TL;DR
This study uses SDSS data to analyze the structure and substructure of the Milky Way's stellar halo, finding it highly irregular and consistent with formation through satellite galaxy accretion.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of observed stellar halo substructure with cosmological simulations, supporting an accretion origin.
Findings
Stellar halo density profile approximately r^{-3}.
Halo exhibits >40% deviation from smooth models, indicating high substructure.
Observed properties match simulations of accreted satellite debris.
Abstract
We have used data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 5 to explore the overall structure and substructure of the stellar halo of the Milky Way using about 4 million color-selected main sequence turn-off stars. We fit oblate and triaxial broken power-law models to the data, and found a `best-fit' oblateness of the stellar halo 0.5<c/a<0.8, and halo stellar masses between Galactocentric radii of 1 and 40kpc of (3.7+/-1.2)x10^8 M_sun. The density profile of the stellar halo is approximately r^{-3}; it is possible that the power law slope is shallower inside 20kpc and steeper outside that radius. Yet, we found that all smooth and symmetric models were very poor fits to the distribution of stellar halo stars because the data exhibit a great deal of spatial substructure. We quantified deviations from a smooth oblate/triaxial model using the RMS of the data around the model…
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