# Characterization and history of the Helmi streams with Gaia DR2

**Authors:** Helmer H. Koppelman, Amina Helmi, Davide Massari, Sebastian Roelenga,, Ulrich Bastian

arXiv: 1812.00846 · 2019-05-01

## TL;DR

This study uses Gaia DR2 and spectroscopic data to identify and characterize nearly 600 new members of the Helmi streams, revealing their properties, origin from a dwarf galaxy, and their significant contribution to the Milky Way's halo.

## Contribution

It provides the first large-scale identification and detailed analysis of Helmi stream members using combined phase-space and spectroscopic data, constraining their origin and impact.

## Key findings

- Nearly 600 new Helmi stream members identified.
- Streams originate from a dwarf galaxy 11-13 Gyr old.
- Contribute about 15% of the Milky Way's halo stars.

## Abstract

The halo of the Milky Way has long been hypothesized to harbour significant amounts of merger debris. This view has been supported over more than a decade by wide-field photometric surveys which have revealed the outer halo to be lumpy. The recent release of Gaia DR2 is allowing us to establish that mergers also have been important and possibly built up the majority of the inner halo. In this work we focus on the Helmi streams, a group of streams crossing the Solar vicinity and known for almost two decades. We characterize their properties and relevance for the build-up of the Milky Way's halo. We identify new members of the Helmi streams in an unprecedented dataset with full phase-space information combining Gaia DR2, and the APOGEE DR2, RAVE DR5 and LAMOST DR4 spectroscopic surveys. Based on the orbital properties of the stars, we find new stream members up to a distance of 5 kpc from the Sun, which we characterize using photometry and metallicity information. We also perform N-body experiments to constrain the time of accretion and properties of the progenitor of the streams. We find nearly 600 new members of the Helmi streams. Their HR diagram reveals a broad age range, from approximately 11 to 13 Gyr, while their metallicity distribution goes from $\sim$ 2.3 to $\sim$1.0, and peaks at [Fe/H] $\sim$1.5. These findings confirm that the streams originate in a dwarf galaxy. Furthermore, we find 7 globular clusters to be likely associated, and which follow a well-defined age-metallicity sequence whose properties suggest a relatively massive progenitor object. Our N-body simulations favour a system with a stellar mass of $\sim 10^8\,\mathrm{M}_\odot$ accreted $5 - 8$ Gyr ago. The debris from the Helmi streams is an important donor to the MilkyWay halo, contributing approximately 15\% of its mass in field stars and 10\% of its globular clusters.

## Full text

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## Figures

17 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.00846/full.md

## References

81 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.00846/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.00846