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The Milky Way Tomography with SDSS. III. Stellar Kinematics

Authors :
Bond, Nicholas A.
Ivezic, Zeljko
Sesar, Branimir
Juric, Mario
Munn, Jeffrey A.
Kowalski, Adam
Loebman, Sarah
Roskar, Rok
Beers, Timothy C.
Dalcanton, Julianne
Rockosi, Constance M.
Yanny, Brian
Newberg, Heidi J.
Allende Prieto, Carlos
Wilhelm, Ron
Lee, Young Sun
Sivarani, Thirupathi
Majewski, Steven R.
Norris, John E.
Bailer-Jones, Coryn A. L.
Fiorentin, Paola Re
Schlegel, David
Uomoto, Alan
Lupton, Robert H.
Knapp, Gillian R.
Gunn, James E.
Covey, Kevin R.
Smith, J. Allyn
Miknaitis, Gajus
Doi, Mamoru
Tanaka, Masayuki
Fukugita, Masataka
Kent, Steve
Finkbeiner, Douglas
Quinn, Tom R.
Hawley, Suzanne
Anderson, Scott
Kiuchi, Furea
Chen, Alex
Bushong, James
Sohi, Harkirat
Haggard, Daryl
Kimball, Amy
McGurk, Rosalie
Barentine, John
Brewington, Howard
Harvanek, Mike
Kleinman, Scott
Krzesinski, Jurek
Long, Dan
Nitta, Atsuko
Snedden, Stephanie
Lee, Brian
Pier, Jeffrey R.
Harris, Hugh
Brinkmann, Jonathan
Schneider, Donald P.
Source :
Quick submit: 2017-05-16T14:42:27-0400, Bond, Nicholas A., Zeljko Ivezic, Branimir Sesar, Mario Juric, Jeffrey A. Munn, Adam Kowalski, Sarah Loebman, et al. 2010. “The Milky Way Tomography with SDSS. III. Stellar Kinematics.” The Astrophysical Journal 716 (1) (May 13): 1–29. doi:10.1088/0004-637x/716/1/1.
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2010.

Abstract

We study Milky Way kinematics using a sample of 18.8 million main-sequence stars with r < 20 and proper-motion measurements derived from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and POSS astrometry, including ~170,000 stars with radial-velocity measurements from the SDSS spectroscopic survey. Distances to stars are determined using a photometric-parallax relation, covering a distance range from ~100 pc to 10 kpc over a quarter of the sky at high Galactic latitudes (|b|>20°). We find that in the region defined by 1 kpc <Z< 5 kpc and 3 kpc <R< 13 kpc, the rotational velocity for disk stars smoothly decreases, and all three components of the velocity dispersion increase, with distance from the Galactic plane. In contrast, the velocity ellipsoid for halo stars is aligned with a spherical coordinate system and appears to be spatially invariant within the probed volume. The velocity distribution of nearby (Z < 1 kpc) K/M stars is complex, and cannot be described by a standard Schwarzschild ellipsoid. For stars in a distance-limited subsample of stars (<100 pc), we detect a multi-modal velocity distribution consistent with that seen by HIPPARCOS. This strong non-Gaussianity significantly affects the measurements of the velocity-ellipsoid tilt and vertex deviation when using the Schwarzschild approximation. We develop and test a simple descriptive model for the overall kinematic behavior that captures these features over most of the probed volume, and can be used to search for substructure in kinematic and metallicity space. We use this model to predict further improvements in kinematic mapping of the Galaxy expected from Gaia and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope.<br />Astronomy

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0004637X
Database :
Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard (DASH)
Journal :
Quick submit: 2017-05-16T14:42:27-0400, Bond, Nicholas A., Zeljko Ivezic, Branimir Sesar, Mario Juric, Jeffrey A. Munn, Adam Kowalski, Sarah Loebman, et al. 2010. “The Milky Way Tomography with SDSS. III. Stellar Kinematics.” The Astrophysical Journal 716 (1) (May 13): 1–29. doi:10.1088/0004-637x/716/1/1.
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edshld.1.33462900
Document Type :
Journal Article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/716/1/1