No Stream Left Unscathed: The imprint of a host galaxy
Arpit Arora, Peter S. Ferguson, Jacob Nibauer, Nora Shipp, Videep Reddy, Eugene Vasiliev, Jack Kohm, Laurella C. Marin, Adrian M. Price-Whelan, Denis Erkal, Sarah Pearson, Andrew Wetzel, Jeremy Bailin, Robert Feldmann

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that host galaxy potentials alone can produce diverse stellar stream features, complicating dark matter substructure detection.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a significant portion of observed stream features can arise from the host galaxy, providing a baseline for future dark matter substructure studies.
Findings
Approximately 75% of streams develop features from the host potential.
Smoothest streams are on orbits beyond 20 kpc, with 10-25% width variation.
Most streams (around 70 out of 15,000) show detectable wiggles without subhalos.
Abstract
Stellar streams from disrupted globular clusters are excellent probes of dark matter (DM) subhalos. Observed Milky Way streams display a remarkable diversity of features: spurs, gaps, kinks, cocoons, and density variations, many attributed to subhalo encounters. But how much of this diversity arises from the host itself? We simulate 15,000 globular cluster streams across four Milky Way-mass halos from the FIRE-2 cosmological simulations, evolved in basis function expansion potentials capturing the evolving disk, halo, and large-scale structure while excluding small-scale perturbers such as DM subhalos and giant molecular clouds. We find that roughly three quarters of streams develop complex features from the host potential, such as spurs, kinks, and cocoon-like envelopes. Even the smoothest streams exhibit 10--25\% width variation along their track and host overdensities and gaps…
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