Galactic seismology: can the Gaia 'phase spiral' co-exist with a clumpy, turbulent interstellar medium?
Thor Tepper-Garc\'ia, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Timothy R. Bedding, Christoph Federrath, Oscar Agertz

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the Gaia 'phase spiral' can exist alongside a turbulent, clumpy interstellar medium by using high-resolution simulations of a galaxy analogue with realistic ISM conditions.
Contribution
It demonstrates how the phase spiral's presence depends on the strength of the disc potential and the ISM structure, highlighting the role of stellar feedback and turbulence.
Findings
The phase spiral is suppressed in strong potential or highly structured ISM.
Turbulent gas with stellar feedback produces a patchy, intermittent phase spiral.
Absence of feedback and cooling leads to no phase spiral.
Abstract
The Gaia satellite revealed a remarkable spiral pattern ('phase spiral', PS) in the z-Vz phase-plane throughout the solar neighbourhood, where z and Vz are the displacement and velocity of a star perpendicular to the Galactic plane. As demonstrated by many groups, the kinematic signature reflects the Galactic stellar disc's response to a dynamical disturbance some 0.3-3 Gyr ago. However, previous controlled simulations did not consider the impact of the multi-phase interstellar medium (ISM) on the existence of the PS. This is crucial because it has been suggested that this weak signal is highly susceptible to scattering by small-scale density fluctuations typical of the ISM. This has motivated us to explore the formation and fate of the PS in a suite of high-resolution, N-body/hydrodynamical simulations of an idealised Galaxy analogue bearing a realistic ISM that interacts impulsively…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
