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Main Authors: Ferrone, Salvatore, Montuori, Marco, Di Matteo, Paola, Mastrobuono-Battisti, Alessandra, Ibata, Rodrigo, Bianchini, Paolo, Khoperskov, Sergey, Leclerc, Nicolas, Hottier, Clement, Stein, Eliot, Valls-Gabaud, David, Snaith, Owain N., Haywood, Misha
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.03941
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author Ferrone, Salvatore
Montuori, Marco
Di Matteo, Paola
Mastrobuono-Battisti, Alessandra
Ibata, Rodrigo
Bianchini, Paolo
Khoperskov, Sergey
Leclerc, Nicolas
Hottier, Clement
Stein, Eliot
Valls-Gabaud, David
Snaith, Owain N.
Haywood, Misha
author_facet Ferrone, Salvatore
Montuori, Marco
Di Matteo, Paola
Mastrobuono-Battisti, Alessandra
Ibata, Rodrigo
Bianchini, Paolo
Khoperskov, Sergey
Leclerc, Nicolas
Hottier, Clement
Stein, Eliot
Valls-Gabaud, David
Snaith, Owain N.
Haywood, Misha
contents Thin stellar streams, such as those resulting from the tidal disruption of globular clusters, have long been known and used as probes of the gravitational potential of our Galaxy, both its visible and dark contents. In particular, the presence of under-density regions, or gaps, along these streams is commonly interpreted as being due to the close passage of dark matter sub-halos. In this work, we investigate the perturbations induced on streams by the passage of dense stellar systems, such as globular clusters themselves, to test the possibility that they may cause the formation of gaps as well. In particular, we focus on the study of the stream of Palomar 5, a well-known globular cluster in the Galactic halo, which has particularly long tidal tails. For this purpose, we used a particle-test code to simulate Palomar 5's tidal tails when subjected to the Galaxy's gravitational field plus its whole system of globular clusters. Our study shows that the tails of Palomar 5 can be strongly perturbed by the close passage of other clusters, in particular of NGC 2808, NGC 7078, NGC 104, and that these perturbations induce the formation of gaps in the tails. These results show that globular clusters are capable of inducing gaps in streams--as other baryonic components such as giant molecular clouds and the galactic bar have been shown to do in other works. Therefore, when searching to construct the distribution function of dark matter sub halos within the Milky Way, the gap contribution from globular clusters must be included.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_03941
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Gaps in stellar streams as a result of globular cluster fly-bys
Ferrone, Salvatore
Montuori, Marco
Di Matteo, Paola
Mastrobuono-Battisti, Alessandra
Ibata, Rodrigo
Bianchini, Paolo
Khoperskov, Sergey
Leclerc, Nicolas
Hottier, Clement
Stein, Eliot
Valls-Gabaud, David
Snaith, Owain N.
Haywood, Misha
Astrophysics of Galaxies
Thin stellar streams, such as those resulting from the tidal disruption of globular clusters, have long been known and used as probes of the gravitational potential of our Galaxy, both its visible and dark contents. In particular, the presence of under-density regions, or gaps, along these streams is commonly interpreted as being due to the close passage of dark matter sub-halos. In this work, we investigate the perturbations induced on streams by the passage of dense stellar systems, such as globular clusters themselves, to test the possibility that they may cause the formation of gaps as well. In particular, we focus on the study of the stream of Palomar 5, a well-known globular cluster in the Galactic halo, which has particularly long tidal tails. For this purpose, we used a particle-test code to simulate Palomar 5's tidal tails when subjected to the Galaxy's gravitational field plus its whole system of globular clusters. Our study shows that the tails of Palomar 5 can be strongly perturbed by the close passage of other clusters, in particular of NGC 2808, NGC 7078, NGC 104, and that these perturbations induce the formation of gaps in the tails. These results show that globular clusters are capable of inducing gaps in streams--as other baryonic components such as giant molecular clouds and the galactic bar have been shown to do in other works. Therefore, when searching to construct the distribution function of dark matter sub halos within the Milky Way, the gap contribution from globular clusters must be included.
title Gaps in stellar streams as a result of globular cluster fly-bys
topic Astrophysics of Galaxies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.03941