The SPLASH Survey: A Spectroscopic Portrait of Andromeda's Giant Southern Stream
Karoline M. Gilbert, Puragra Guhathakurta, Priya Kollipara, Rachael L., Beaton, Marla C. Geha, Jason S. Kalirai, Evan N. Kirby, Steven R. Majewski,, and Richard J. Patterson

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopy to analyze the kinematics and metallicity of stars in Andromeda's giant southern stream, revealing complex substructures and providing insights into its origin and evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first kinematical detection of substructure in the GSS envelope and details the velocity and metallicity profiles of different GSS components.
Findings
Detection of the innermost GSS core at R=17 kpc.
Identification of a bifurcation in GSS star velocities.
First kinematical detection of substructure in the GSS envelope.
Abstract
The giant southern stream (GSS) is the most prominent tidal debris feature in M31's stellar halo. The GSS is composed of a relatively metal-rich, high surface-brightness "core" and a lower metallicity, lower surface brightness "envelope." We present Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy of red giant stars in six fields in the vicinity of M31's GSS and one field on Stream C, an arc-like feature on M31's SE minor axis at R=60 kpc. Several GSS-related findings and measurements are presented here. We present the innermost kinematical detection of the GSS core to date (R=17 kpc). This field also contains the continuation of a second kinematically cold component originally seen in a GSS core field at R=21 kpc. The velocity gradients of the GSS and the second component in the combined data set are parallel over a radial range of 7 kpc, suggesting a possible bifurcation in the line-of-sight velocities of…
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