$S^5$: The Orbital and Chemical Properties of One Dozen Stellar Streams
Ting S. Li, Alexander P. Ji, Andrew B. Pace, Denis Erkal, Sergey E., Koposov, Nora Shipp, Gary S. Da Costa, Lara R. Cullinane, Kyler Kuehn,, Geraint F. Lewis, Dougal Mackey, Jeffrey D. Simpson, Daniel B. Zucker, Peter, S. Ferguson, Sarah L. Martell, Joss Bland-Hawthorn

TL;DR
This study characterizes the kinematic, orbital, and chemical properties of 12 stellar streams, revealing their origins from disrupted dwarf galaxies and globular clusters, and identifying potential associations with known Milky Way structures.
Contribution
It provides the largest homogeneous dataset of streams with full 6D kinematics and metallicities, distinguishing progenitors and their properties.
Findings
Half of the streams originate from disrupted dwarf galaxies.
Four GC streams are more metal-poor than typical Milky Way GCs.
Some streams are associated with the Gaia-Enceladus-Sausage system.
Abstract
We report the kinematic, orbital, and chemical properties of 12 stellar streams with no evident progenitors, using line-of-sight velocities and metallicities from the Southern Stellar Stream Spectroscopic Survey (), proper motions from EDR3, and distances derived from distance tracers or the literature. This data set provides the largest homogeneously analyzed set of streams with full 6D kinematics and metallicities. All streams have heliocentric distances between kpc. The velocity and metallicity dispersions show that half of the stream progenitors were disrupted dwarf galaxies (DGs), while the other half originated from disrupted globular clusters (GCs), hereafter referred to as DG and GC streams. Based on the mean metallicities of the streams and the mass-metallicity relation, the luminosities of the progenitors of the DG streams range between Carina and…
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