A box full of chocolates: The rich structure of the nearby stellar halo revealed by Gaia and RAVE
Amina Helmi, Jovan Veljanoski, Maarten A. Breddels, Hao Tian, Laura, V. Sales

TL;DR
This study uses Gaia and RAVE data to analyze the kinematic substructure of the Milky Way's stellar halo, providing evidence that supports a formation history dominated by accretion and mergers.
Contribution
It offers new insights into the complex phase-space structure of the stellar halo and quantifies the extent of merger debris using velocity correlations and integrals of motion.
Findings
Significant substructure detected in halo star velocities.
High fraction (58-73%) of less bound stars are on retrograde orbits.
Results consistent with halo formed predominantly via accretion.
Abstract
The hierarchical structure formation model predicts that stellar halos should form, at least partly, via mergers. If this was a predominant formation channel for the Milky Way's halo, imprints of this merger history in the form of moving groups or streams should exist also in the vicinity of the Sun. Here we study the kinematics of halo stars in the Solar neighbourhood using the very recent first data release from the Gaia mission, and in particular the TGAS dataset, in combination with data from the RAVE survey. Our aim is to determine the amount of substructure present in the phase-space distribution of halo stars that could be linked to merger debris. To characterise kinematic substructure, we measure the velocity correlation function in our sample of halo (low metallicity) stars. We also study the distribution of these stars in the space of energy and two components of the angular…
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