Group Finding in the Stellar Halo using Photometric Surveys: Current Sensitivity and Future Prospects
Sanjib Sharma, Kathryn V Johnston, Steven R. Majewski, James Bullock,, Ricardo R. Mu\~noz

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the effectiveness of current and future photometric surveys in detecting stellar halo substructures, highlighting their capabilities and limitations in uncovering Galactic accretion history over the last 10 billion years.
Contribution
It compares group-finding results from existing surveys with simulations and assesses how upcoming surveys can improve detection of stellar halo substructures.
Findings
Current surveys detect recent high-luminosity accretion events.
Future surveys will enhance sensitivity to low-luminosity and eccentric orbit events.
Combining different survey types offers a comprehensive view of Galactic accretion history.
Abstract
The ubiquity of substructure in the stellar halo has already been demonstrated by the SDSS and 2MASS and future surveys promise to explore the halo in ever more detail. This paper examines what can be learnt from current and future photometric-databases using group-finding techniques. We compare groups recovered from a sample of M-giants from 2MASS with those found in synthetic surveys of simulated CDM stellar halos and demonstrate broad consistency. We also find that these recovered groups are likely to represent the majority of high-luminosity () satellites accreted within the last 10 Gyr and on orbits with apocenters within 100 kpc. However the sensitivity of the M-giant survey to accretion events that were either ancient, from low-luminosity objects or those on radial orbits is limited because of the low number of stars, bias towards high-metallicity…
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