SIMBAD references

2020ApJ...899..110T - Astrophys. J., 899, 110-110 (2020/August-3)

Differential rotation of the halo traced by K-giant stars.

TIAN H., LIU C., WANG Y., XU Y., YANG C., ZHANG B. and XUE X.-X.

Abstract (from CDS):

We use K-giant stars selected from the LAMOST DR5 to study the variation of the rotational velocity of the Galactic halo at different space positions. Modeling the rotational velocity distribution with both the halo and disk components, we find that the rotational velocity of the halo population decreases almost linearly with increasing vertical distance to the Galactic disk plane, Z, at fixed galactocentric radius, R. The samples are separated into two parts with 6< R< 12kpc and 12< R< 20kpc. We derive that the decreasing rates along Z for the two subsamples are -3.07 ± 0.63 and -1.89 ± 0.37 km s–1 kpc–1, respectively. Comparing with the TNG simulations, we suggest that this trend is caused by the interaction between the disk and halo. The results from the simulations show that only an oblate halo can provide a decreasing rotational velocity with increasing Z. This indicates that the Galactic halo is oblate with galactocentric radius R< 20kpc. On the other hand, the flaring of the disk component (mainly the thick disk) is clearly traced by this study; with R between 12 and 20 kpc, the disk can vertically extend to 6∼10kpc above the disk plane. What is more interesting is that we find the Gaia-Enceladus-Sausage component has a significant contribution only in the halo with R< 12kpc, i.e., a fraction of 23%-47%, while in the outer subsample, the contribution is too low to be well constrained.

Abstract Copyright: © 2020. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): Milky Way stellar halo - Milky Way Galaxy - Milky Way rotation - Milky Way evolution - K giant stars - Milky Way dynamics - Milky Way disk

Simbad objects: 10

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2020ApJ...899..110T and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu