Epicyclic Density Variations in the Indus Stellar Stream
Yong Yang, Geraint F. Lewis, Ting S. Li, Sarah L. Martell, Denis Erkal, Alexander P. Ji, Sergey E. Koposov, Daniel B. Zucker, Andrew B. Pace, Lara R. Cullinane, Gary S. Da Costa, Kyler Kuehn, Guilherme Limberg, Gustavo E. Medina, and S5 Collaboration

TL;DR
This study analyzes the density fluctuations in the Indus stellar stream, attributing them mainly to epicyclic motions, and uses this to infer properties of its dark matter halo.
Contribution
It demonstrates that epicyclic motions can explain observed density variations and suggests the Indus stream's halo is likely cuspy based on density peak analysis.
Findings
Observed density peaks match N-body simulation predictions.
Epicyclic motions can account for the density fluctuations.
Indus's density profile suggests a cuspy dark matter halo.
Abstract
Longitudinal density fluctuations observed in stellar streams can result from gravitational interactions with massive perturbers in the Milky Way, such as dark matter subhalos. Analysing these density variations provides a powerful probe of properties (motion, mass, size, etc.) of the perturbing objects. However, caution is needed because density variations may arise naturally from internal dynamics of streams, namely epicycles. In this work, we focus on the Indus stellar stream, a remnant of an ancient dwarf satellite of the Galaxy. An Indus stream spanning is revealed in the southern Galactic sky using a comprehensive matched-filter analysis utilizing data from the Gaia mission. A spatial density model is fitted to the filtered map to quantitatively characterize the morphology, which demonstrates episodic density peaks and gaps in the stream. Through N-body…
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