Let $G=\text{SL}(d,\mathbb R)$ and $\Gamma = \text{SL}(d,\mathbb Z)$. The homogeneous space is identified with the space of unimodular lattices, denoted $X_d$. Let $Y_d$ denote the space of unimodular grids, namely the translation of lattices $Y_d:=\{x+v: x\in X_d, v\in \mathbb R^d \}$. Let $\pi:Y_d \to X_d$ be the natural projection $x+v \mapsto x$.
Let $A$ denote the subgroup of $G$ consisting of all diagonal matrices of positive entries (of course, the determinant has to be one).
Let $x_0\in X_d$. If $y_0\in \pi^{-1}(x_0)$ is irrational, namely $y_0$ is not in the rational span of $x_0$ (span of basis of the lattice $x_0$ with rational coefficients), then it is intuitively correct to me that
$$\overline{Ay_0} \supset \pi^{-1}(x_0).$$
Namely the closure of the $A$-orbit will contain the whole fiber $\pi^{-1}(x_0)$.
The intuition comes from the fact that irrational lines on a torus are dense.
Is this necessarily correct? How do we prove this rigorously? Note that if $y_0 = x_0 + v_0$, then we do not necessarily have $Ay_0 = Ax_0 + Av_0$ (LHS is contained in RHS, though).