The GALAH survey and Gaia DR2: dissecting the stellar disc's phase space by age, action, chemistry and location
Joss Bland-Hawthorn (University of Sydney), Sanjib Sharma, Thor, Tepper-Garcia, James Binney, Ken Freeman, Michael Hayden, Janez Kos, Gayandhi, De Silva, Simon Ellis, Shourya Khanna, Geraint Lewis, Martin Asplund, Sven, Buder, Andrew Casey, Valentina D'Orazi, Ly Duong, Jane Lin

TL;DR
This study combines Gaia and GALAH data to analyze the Milky Way's disc structure, revealing the widespread phase spiral caused by tidal interactions, and providing insights into disc dynamics and perturbations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the extension of the phase spiral beyond the solar neighborhood and links it to recent tidal disturbances by the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy.
Findings
The phase spiral extends beyond the solar neighborhood.
The phase spiral is mainly confined to the alpha-poor disc.
A recent tidal interaction with Sagittarius likely caused the phase spiral.
Abstract
We use the second data releases of the ESA Gaia astrometric survey and the high-resolution GALAH spectroscopic survey to analyse the structure of our Galaxy's disc components. With GALAH, we separate the alpha-rich and alpha-poor discs (with respect to Fe), which are superposed in both position and velocity space, and examine their distributions in action space. We study the distribution of stars in the zV_z phase plane, for both V_phi and V_R, and recover the remarkable "phase spiral" discovered by Gaia. We identify the anticipated quadrupole signature in zV_z of a tilted velocity ellipsoid for stars above and below the Galactic plane. By connecting our work with earlier studies, we show that the phase spiral is likely to extend well beyond the narrow solar neighbourhood cylinder in which it was found. The phase spiral is a signature of corrugated waves that propagate through the disc,…
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