Origin of the two-armed vertical phase-spiral in the inner Galactic disk
Gaia recently revealed a two-armed spiral pattern in the vertical phase-space distribution of the inner Galactic disk (guiding radius $R_\textrm{g} \sim 6.2$ kpc), indicating that some non-adiabatic perturbation symmetric about the mid-plane is driving the inner disk out of equilibrium. The non-axis...
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Main Authors | , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
26.03.2025
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Gaia recently revealed a two-armed spiral pattern in the vertical phase-space
distribution of the inner Galactic disk (guiding radius $R_\textrm{g} \sim 6.2$
kpc), indicating that some non-adiabatic perturbation symmetric about the
mid-plane is driving the inner disk out of equilibrium. The non-axisymmetric
structures in the disk (e.g., the bar or spiral arms) have been suspected to be
the major source for such a perturbation. However, both the lifetime and the
period of these internal perturbations are typically longer than the period at
which stars oscillate vertically, implying that the perturbation is generally
adiabatic. This issue is particularly pronounced in the inner Galaxy, where the
vertical oscillation period is shorter and therefore adiabatically shielded
more than the outer disk. We show that two-armed phase spirals can naturally
form in the inner disk if there is a vertical resonance that breaks the
adiabaticity; otherwise, their formation requires a perturber with an
unrealistically short lifetime. We predict analytically and confirm with
simulations that a steadily rotating (non-winding) two-armed phase spiral forms
near the resonance when stars are subject to both periodic perturbations (e.g.,
by spiral arms) and stochastic perturbations (e.g., by giant molecular clouds).
Due to the presence of multiple resonances, the vertical phase-space exhibits
several local phase spirals that rotate steadily at distinct frequencies,
together forming a global phase spiral that evolves over time. Our results
demonstrate that, contrary to earlier predictions, the formation of the
two-armed phase spiral does not require transient perturbations with lifetimes
shorter than the vertical oscillation period. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2503.20869 |