Stellar Streams in the Gaia Era
Ana Bonaca, Adrian M. Price-Whelan

TL;DR
Gaia has revolutionized our understanding of Milky Way stellar streams by increasing their known numbers, revealing density variations, and enabling detailed kinematic studies, which are crucial for probing dark matter substructures.
Contribution
This paper reviews how Gaia data has transformed the study of stellar streams, highlighting discoveries of new streams, density variations, and detailed kinematic information for the first time.
Findings
Over a hundred stellar streams identified with Gaia.
Detection of common density variations along streams.
Kinematic data constrains streams' orbits and origins.
Abstract
The hierarchical model of galaxy formation predicts that the Milky Way halo is populated by tidal debris of dwarf galaxies and globular clusters. Due to long dynamical times, debris from the lowest mass objects remains coherent as thin and dynamically cold stellar streams for billions of years. The Gaia mission, providing astrometry and spectrophotometry for billions of stars, has brought three fundamental changes to our view of stellar streams in the Milky Way. First, more than a hundred stellar streams have been discovered and characterized using Gaia data. This is an order of magnitude increase in the number of known streams, thanks to Gaia's capacity for identifying comoving groups of stars among the field Milky Way population. Second, Gaia data have revealed that density variations both along and across stellar streams are common. Dark-matter subhalos, as well as baryonic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
