On the radial velocity wave in the Galactic disk
Chris Hamilton, Andrew Mummery, Joss Bland-Hawthorn

TL;DR
This paper derives an analytic model for the Galactic disk's radial velocity wave, explaining its phase shift and linking it to spiral perturbations, validated by simulations and fitting real data.
Contribution
It introduces a simple analytic formula for the $J_\varphi$-$\overline{v}_R$ wave, connecting it to galaxy perturbations and identifying spiral arms as a key driver.
Findings
Analytic formula accurately predicts the wave for cold stellar populations.
Distant tidal interactions and rigid bars cannot produce the observed wave.
Short-lived spiral arms can generate the $J_\varphi$-$\overline{v}_R$ signal.
Abstract
Stars in the Galactic disk have mean radial velocities that oscillate as a function of angular momentum . This `- wave' signal also exhibits a systematic phase shift when stars are binned by their dynamical temperatures. However, the origin of the wave is unknown. Here we use linear perturbation theory to derive a simple analytic formula for the - signal that depends on the equilibrium properties of the Galaxy and the history of recent perturbations to it. The formula naturally explains the phase shift, but also predicts that different classes of perturbation should drive - signals with very different morphologies. Ignoring the self-gravity of disk fluctuations, it suggests that neither a distant tidal kick (e.g., from the Sgr dwarf) nor a rigidly-rotating Galactic bar can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
