TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method using action-angle variables to analyze how dark matter subhalos perturb tidal streams, enabling precise constraints on the small-scale structure of dark matter in the Milky Way.
Contribution
The paper develops a novel calculus for modeling subhalo impacts on tidal streams, allowing rapid computation of perturbations and providing new insights into the dark matter subhalo population.
Findings
Identified 10^{+11}_{-6} subhalos within 20 kpc, consistent with CDM predictions.
Established a link between subhalo mass and the scale of induced stream fluctuations.
Demonstrated the method's effectiveness on the Pal 5 stream data.
Abstract
Tidal streams in the Milky Way are sensitive probes of the population of dark-matter subhalos predicted in cold-dark-matter (CDM) simulations. We present a new calculus for computing the effect of subhalo fly-bys on cold tidal streams based on the action-angle representation of streams. The heart of this calculus is a line-of-parallel-angle approach that calculates the perturbed distribution function of a given stream segment by undoing the effect of all impacts. This approach allows one to compute the perturbed stream density and track in any coordinate system in minutes for realizations of the subhalo distribution down to 10^5 Msun, accounting for the stream's internal dispersion and overlapping impacts. We study the properties of density and track fluctuations with suites of simulations. The one-dimensional density and track power spectra along the stream trace the subhalo mass…
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