On the kinematic detection of accreted streams in the Gaia era: a cautionary tale
I. Jean-Baptiste, P. Di Matteo, M. Haywood, A. Gomez, M. Montuori, F., Combes, and B. Semelin

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution N-body simulations to show that identifying accreted stellar streams in the Milky Way using kinematic spaces is highly ambiguous due to overlaps and substructure overlaps, complicating efforts to reconstruct the Galaxy's accretion history.
Contribution
It demonstrates through simulations that kinematic spaces alone are insufficient for reliably detecting accreted streams, highlighting the need for combined chemical and spectroscopic data.
Findings
Overdensities from different satellites overlap in kinematic spaces.
Multiple satellites can produce similar substructures.
In-situ stars also form substructures due to accretion events.
Abstract
The CDM cosmological scenario predicts that our Galaxy should contain hundreds of stellar streams at the solar vicinity, fossil relics of the merging history of the Milky Way and more generally of the hierarchical growth of galaxies. Because of the mixing time scales in the inner Galaxy, it has been claimed that these streams should be difficult to detect in configuration space but can still be identifiable in kinematic-related spaces like the energy/angular momenta spaces, E-Lz and Lperp-Lz, or spaces of orbital/velocity parameters. By means of high-resolution, dissipationless N-body simulations, containing between 25 and 35 particles, we model the accretion of a series of up to four 1:10 mass ratio satellites then up to eight 1:100 satellites and we search systematically for the signature of these accretions in these spaces. In all spaces considered…
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