Update on the Cetus Polar Stream and its Progenitor
William Yam, Jeffrey L. Carlin, Heidi Jo Newberg, Julie Dumas, Erin, O'Malley, Matthew Newby, Charles Martin

TL;DR
This paper refines the orbit, properties, and progenitor characteristics of the Cetus Polar Stream using SDSS data, N-body simulations, and stellar metallicity analysis, suggesting an ultra-faint dwarf galaxy origin.
Contribution
It provides updated orbital parameters, estimates the progenitor's mass, and explores the nature of the progenitor galaxy through combined observational and simulation approaches.
Findings
CPS is on a polar orbit between 24-36 kpc from the Galactic center.
Progenitor mass estimated at at least 10^8 solar masses.
Most stars in the stream have metallicities between -2.5 and -2.0.
Abstract
We trace the Cetus Polar Stream (CPS) with blue horizontal branch (BHB) and red giant stars (RGBs) from Data Release 8 of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS DR8). Using a larger dataset than was available previously, we are able to refine the measured distance and velocity to this tidal debris star stream in the south Galactic cap. Assuming the tidal debris traces the progenitor's orbit, we fit an orbit to the CPS and find that the stream is confined between ~24-36 kpc on a rather polar orbit inclined 87 degrees to the Galactic plane. The eccentricity of the orbit is 0.20, and the period ~700 Myr. If we instead matched N-body simulations to the observed tidal debris, these orbital parameters would change by 10% or less. The CPS stars travel in the opposite direction to those from the Sagittarius tidal stream in the same region of the sky. Through N-body models of satellites on the…
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