On the chaos induced by the Galactic bar on the orbits of nearby halo stars
Hanneke C. Woudenberg, Amina Helmi

TL;DR
This study investigates how the Milky Way's rotating bar induces chaos in the orbits of nearby halo stars, affecting their distribution in energy and angular momentum space and complicating the identification of accreted substructures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the chaotic dynamics caused by the Galactic bar on local halo stars and assesses implications for orbital classification and substructure detection.
Findings
Over half of the sampled stars are on chaotic orbits due to the bar.
Chaotic stars tend to be on very bound and radial orbits.
The bar induces resonances, especially affecting low-inclination prograde orbits.
Abstract
Many of the Milky Way's accreted substructures have been discovered and studied in the space of energy , and angular momentum components and . In a static axisymmetric system, these quantities are (reasonable approximations of) the integrals of motion of an orbit. However, in a galaxy like the Milky Way with a triaxial, rotating bar, none of these quantities are conserved, and the only known integral is the Jacobi energy . This may result in chaotic orbits, especially for inner halo stars. Here, we investigate the bar's effect on the dynamics of nearby halo stars, and more specifically its impact on their distribution in space. To this end, we have integrated and characterised the orbits of halo stars located within 1 kpc from the Sun. We computed their orbital frequencies and quantified the degree of chaoticity and associated timescales,…
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