Snails Across Scales: Local and Global Phase-Mixing Structures as Probes of the Past and Future Milky Way
Suroor S. Gandhi, Kathryn V. Johnston, Jason A. S. Hunt, Adrian M., Price-Whelan, Chervin F. P. Laporte, David W. Hogg

TL;DR
This paper investigates how local and global phase-mixing structures in the Milky Way's disk, caused by satellite perturbations like Sagittarius, can reveal the galaxy's perturbation history through simulations and models.
Contribution
It demonstrates the connection between local phase-spirals and global structures, showing how they can be used to trace the Milky Way's perturbation events and history.
Findings
Multiple local phase-spirals are excited by a single satellite event.
Distinct phase-spirals correspond to different disk locations and times.
The Sagittarius satellite's influence creates detectable global signatures in the Milky Way.
Abstract
Signatures of vertical disequilibrium have been observed across the Milky Way's disk. These signatures manifest locally as unmixed phase-spirals in -- space ("snails-in-phase") and globally as nonzero mean and which wraps around as a physical spiral across the -- plane ("snails-in-space"). We explore the connection between these local and global spirals through the example of a satellite perturbing a test-particle Milky Way (MW)-like disk. We anticipate our results to broadly apply to any vertical perturbation. Using a -- asymmetry metric we demonstrate that in test-particle simulations: (a) multiple local phase-spiral morphologies appear when stars are binned by azimuthal action , excited by a single event (in our case, a satellite disk-crossing); (b) these distinct phase-spirals are traced back to distinct disk locations; and (c) they are…
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