ATNF-AAO Joint Colloquium.


Tuesday 5 August 2003

3:30pm ATNF Lecture Theatre

Star Streams in the Milky Way Halo

Heather Morrison, Case Western/RSAA

The last 10-20 years has seen a profound shift in views of how the Galaxy's halo formed. The idea of a monolithic early collapse of a single system (Eggen, Lynden-Bell and Sandage 1962) has been replaced by observations and simulations of structure formation which imply that we should see clear evidence of hierarchical formation processes in nearby galaxies. Recent studies of our Galaxy, made possible by large-scale CCD surveys such as SDSS and 2MASS, have revealed evidence of tidal debris in the outer halo of the Milky Way. I will review streams associated with known Milky Way satellites and star streams whose progenitors are still unknown, and discuss how the streams can be used to study the Milky Way's dark halo. This will include results from our ongoing pencil-beam halo survey, the Spaghetti survey.