ArXiv TLDR

The DECam MAGIC Survey: Investigating the Jet Stellar Stream with Photometric Metallicities

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2604.13374

H Q. Do, A. Chiti, P. S. Ferguson, A. P. Ji, G. Limberg + 23 more

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

The DECam MAGIC survey uses photometric metallicities to identify 213 Jet stream members, revealing its fanning morphology.

Key contributions

  • Leveraged DECam MAGIC survey with Ca II H&K narrowband filter for photometric metallicities.
  • Identified 213 candidate Jet stream members using photometric metallicities and Gaia DR3 proper motions.
  • Observed a clear fanning morphology in the Jet stream, especially farther from the Milky Way bar.
  • Provided a list of candidate members for future spectroscopic follow-up studies.

Why it matters

Understanding stellar streams like Jet helps map the Milky Way's gravitational potential and accretion history. This study's new member identification and morphological analysis provide crucial data for probing dark matter subhalos. The method also offers an efficient way to study other streams.

Original Abstract

Stellar streams are dynamically fragile structures formed by the tidal disruption of dwarf galaxies and stellar clusters. These objects are valuable tracers of the gravitational potential and accretion history of the Milky Way, and are key probes for the presence and interactions of starless dark matter subhalos. The Jet stream is a $\sim 30^\circ$-long stellar stream that is situated at 30.4 kpc and originates from a disrupted globular cluster.It consists of metal-poor stars that follow a retrograde orbit, reducing the impulse imparted from the Milky Way bar and making it especially sensitive to gravitational perturbations from dark matter subhalos. This paper investigates the known extent of the Jet stream by leveraging photometric metallicities derived from a narrowband filter centered on the Ca II H&K lines at $\sim$3950A on the Dark Energy Camera (DECam), as part of the Mapping the Ancient Galaxy in CaHK (MAGIC) survey. The wide field-of-view of DECam enables the efficient derivation of photometric metallicities for stars across the full extent of the stream, allowing for a metallicity-based selection to identify likely members. We demonstrate the efficacy of photometric metallicities in isolating stream members when used with Gaia DR3 proper motions, identifying a sample of 213 candidate Jet stream member stars. This then allows for the study of stream morphology, through which we identify a clear fanning of the stream toward the end farther from the Milky Way bar. We provide a list of candidate members, enabling spectroscopic follow-up of the Jet stream to facilitate further studies of its dynamics.

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