Is the sky falling? Searching for stellar streams in the local Milky Way disc in the CORAVEL and RAVE surveys
G. M. Seabroke, G. Gilmore, A. Siebert, O. Bienayme, J. Binney, J., Bland-Hawthorn, R. Campbell, K. C. Freeman, B. Gibson, E. K. Grebel, A., Helmi, U. Munari, J. F. Navarro, Q. A. Parker, A. Siviero, M. Steinmetz, F., G. Watson, R. F. G. Wyse, T. Zwitter, J. Penarrubia

TL;DR
This study searches for stellar streams in the local Milky Way disc using CORAVEL and RAVE data, finding no evidence of vertical streams or tidal debris near the Sun, which constrains models of Galactic structure and dark matter distribution.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed search for vertical stellar streams in the solar neighborhood using large spectroscopic surveys, setting limits on their presence and implications for Galactic models.
Findings
No vertically coherent streams detected in local samples.
Rules out the passing of the Sagittarius tidal stream through the solar neighborhood.
Finds no evidence for dark matter overdensities from local stellar streams.
Abstract
We have searched for in-falling stellar streams on to the local Milky Way disc in the CORAVEL and RAVE surveys. The CORAVEL survey consists of local dwarf stars (Nordstrom et al. Geneva-Copenhagen survey) and local Famaey et al. giant stars. We select RAVE stars with radial velocities that are sensitive to the Galactic vertical space velocity (Galactic latitude b < -45 deg). Kuiper statistics have been employed to test the symmetry of the Galactic vertical velocity distribution functions in these samples for evidence of a net vertical flow that could be associated with a (tidal?) stream of stars with vertically coherent kinematics. In contrast to the `Field of Streams' found in the outer halo, we find that the local volumes of the solar neighbourhood sampled by the CORAVEL dwarfs (complete within ~3 x 10^-4 kpc^3), CORAVEL giants (complete within ~5 x 10^-2 kpc^3) and RAVE (5-15%…
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