The multiple corrugations in the Galactic disk derived from the LAMOST and Gaia survey data
Jifei Wang, Zhuohan Li, Chengdong Li, Yuqin Chen, Chengqun Yang + 4 more
TLDR
Using LAMOST and Gaia data, this study reveals that multiple radial corrugations provide a plausible explanation for the Milky Way disk's complex wave-like features.
Key contributions
- Analyzed LAMOST DR8 and Gaia DR3 data to map wave-like patterns in the Galactic disk.
- Identified a clear structural transition between the inner and outer Milky Way disks.
- Developed a two-wave corrugation model that accurately reproduces observed kinematic signatures.
- N-body simulations validated the model, supporting radial corrugations as the underlying cause.
Why it matters
This paper offers a robust physical interpretation for the complex, wave-like structures seen in the Milky Way disk. By modeling radial corrugations, it significantly advances our understanding of the dynamic processes shaping our galaxy. This work is vital for interpreting data from upcoming Galactic surveys.
Original Abstract
Large spectroscopic and astrometric surveys have revealed complex wave-like features in the Milky Way disk, suggesting that its kinematic and chemical structures are shaped by time-dependent perturbations. Recent studies have reported oscillatory patterns in the Rg-Vphi-VR space, hinting at a possible structural transition in the outer disk. We aim to characterise the transition between the inner and outer Galactic thin disk and to investigate whether radial corrugations can provide a plausible physical interpretation of the observed features. We analysed two large stellar samples from LAMOST DR8 and Gaia DR3, combining spatial, kinematic, and chemical diagnostics. A simplified corrugation model consisting of two radial waves propagating in opposite directions was constructed and fitted to the observed VR pattern. We further validated the model using N-body simulations. Both LAMOST and Gaia samples reproduce the previously reported wave-like pattern in the Rg-Vphi-VR plane. We identify a clear transition between the inner and outer disks via the variations in rotational velocity and metallicities. The corrugation model naturally reproduces the periodic variation of VR with galactocentric radius, and the superposition of the inward and outward propagating modes gives rise to a comparable oscillatory pattern in both observations and simulations. Our modelling suggests that radial corrugations can provide a plausible interpretation of the observed kinematic signatures. The results highlight the complex, multi-perturber nature of the Galactic disk and motivate further investigation with upcoming surveys.
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