The Milky Way's Shell Structure Reveals the Time of a Radial Collision
Thomas Donlon II, Heidi Jo Newberg, Robyn Sanderson, Lawrence M., Widrow

TL;DR
This study identifies shell structures in the Milky Way, dating a past collision with a dwarf galaxy to approximately 2.7 billion years ago, and explores implications for Galactic evolution and merger history.
Contribution
First detection of shell structures in the Milky Way and development of a method to accurately estimate the timing of past galactic mergers.
Findings
Shell structures are identified in the Milky Way's halo.
The progenitor dwarf galaxy passed through the Galactic center about 2.7 Gyr ago.
Shell features in simulations disappear after 5 Gyr post-collision.
Abstract
We identify shell structures in the Milky Way for the first time. We find 2 shells in the Virgo Overdensity (VOD) region and 2 shells in the Hercules Aquila Cloud (HAC) region using Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Gaia, and LAMOST data. These shell stars are a subset of the substructure previously identified as the Virgo Radial Merger (VRM). Timing arguments for these shells indicate that their progenitor dwarf galaxy passed through the Galactic center 2.7 +/- 0.2 Gyr ago. Based on the time of collision, it is also possible that the VRM is related to the phenomenon that created phase-space spirals in the vertical motion of the disk and/or the Splash, and could have caused a burst of star formation in the inner disk. We analyze phase mixing in a collection of radial merger N-body simulations, and find that shell structure similar to that observed in Milky Way data disappears by 5 Gyr after…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
