Probing the shape and history of the Milky Way halo with orbital spectral analysis
Monica Valluri, Victor P. Debattista, Thomas R. Quinn, Rok Roskar and, James Wadsley

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how spectral analysis of halo star orbits can reveal the Milky Way's halo shape, orbital resonances, and disk formation history, providing a new tool for galactic potential estimation.
Contribution
It introduces spectral analysis techniques for halo orbits, linking orbital resonances to the dark matter halo shape and disk growth history, validated through controlled galaxy simulations.
Findings
Frequency maps reveal halo shape and orbit families.
Resonant trapping indicates adiabatic disk growth.
Diffusion rates help constrain the Galactic potential.
Abstract
The phase space coordinates of individual halo stars obtained by Galactic surveys enable the computation of their full 3-dimensional orbits. Spectral analysis of halo orbits can be used to construct "frequency maps" which provide a compact representation of the 6-dimensional phase space distribution function. Frequency maps identify important major orbit families, and the orbital abundances reflect the shape and orientation of the dark matter halo relative to the disk. We apply spectral analysis to halo orbits in a series of controlled simulations of disk galaxies. Although the shape of the simulated halo varies with radius, frequency maps of local samples of halo orbits confined to the inner halo contain most of the information about the global shape of the halo and its major orbit families. Quiescent or adiabatic disk formation results in significant trapping of halo orbits in…
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