446 research outputs found
The bulge luminosity functions in the MSX infrared bands
We use an inversion technique to derive the luminosity functions of the
Galactic bulge from point source counts extracted from the Midcourse Space
Experiment's Point Source Catalog (version 1.2).Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to be published in A&
A boxy bulge in the Milky Way. Inversion of the stellar statistics equation with 2MASS data
Inverting the stellar statistics equation from 2MASS star counts, we obtain
the 3D density distribution of the Galactic bulge as well as its luminosity
function in the K-band. This results in a boxy bulge with axial ratios
1:0.5:0.4 and a major axis angle with respect to the Sun-galactic center of
.Comment: 5 pages, accepted to be published in A&
Azimuthal dependence of the density distribution in outer galactic discs accreting intergalactic flows
AIMS. The amplitude and scaleheight of the Galactic gas disc density are not
axisymmetric against expectations in a self-gravity axisymmetric disc. However,
this lopsidedness can be explained in terms of intergalactic accretion flows,
which produce non-axisymmetric pressure on the disc. This mechanism could be
also responsible for the formation of a warp.
METHODS. We analytically derive the relationship between the disc density and
the self-gravity and external pressure.
RESULTS. The same scenario of accretion as we proposed years ago to explain
the formation of the warp explains the azimuthal dependence of the density and
its scaleheight, with minimum/maximum in the positions of maximum amplitude of
the warp (phi=95 deg. and 275 deg.), as expected from its pressure
distribution.Comment: 4 pages, accepted to be published in A&A-letter
Modeling Star counts in the Monoceros stream and the Galactic anti-centre
There is a continued debate as to the form of the outer disc of the Milky Way
galaxy, which has important implications for its formation. Stars are known to
exist at a galacto-centric distance of at least 20 kpc. However, there is much
debate as to whether these stars can be explained as being part of the disc or
whether another extra galactic structure, the so called Monoceros ring/stream,
is required. To examine the outer disc of the Galaxy toward the anti-centre to
determine whether the star counts can be explained by the thin and thick discs
alone. Using Sloan star counts and extracting the late F and early G dwarfs it
is possible to directly determine the density of stars out to a galacto-centric
distance of about 25 kpc. These are then compared with a simple flared disc
model. A flared disc model is shown to reproduce the counts along the line of
sights examined, if the thick disc does not have a sharp cut off. The flare
starts at a Galacto-centric radius of 16 kpc and has a scale length of
4.5+/-1.5 kpc. Whilst the interpretation of the counts in terms of a
ring/stream cannot be definitely discounted, it does not appear to be
necessary, at least along the lines of sight examined towards the anti centre.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted to be published in A&
The value of the fine structure constant over cosmological times
The optical spectra of objects classified as QSOs in the SDSS DR6 are
analyzed with the aim of determining the value of the fine structure constant
in the past and then check for possible changes in the constant over
cosmological timescales. The analysis is done by measuring the position of the
fine structure lines of the [OIII] doublet (4959 and 5008) in QSO nebular
emission. From the sample of QSOs at redshifts z < 0.8 a subsample was selected
on the basis of the amplitude and width of the [OIII] lines. Two different
method were used to determine the position of the lines of the [OIII] doublet,
both giving similar results. Using a clean sample containing 1568 of such
spectra, a value of Delta alpha /alpha=(+2.4 +-2.5) x 10^{-5} (in the range of
redshifts 0-0.8) was determined. The use of a larger number of spectra allows a
factor ~5 improvement on previous constraints based on the same method. On the
whole, we find no evidence of changes in alpha on such cosmological timescales.
The mean variation compatible with our results is 1/ Delta
alpha/alpha=(+0.7 +- 0.7) x 10^{-14} yr^{-1}. The analysis was extended to the
[NeIII] and [SII] doublets, although their usefulness is limited due to the
fact that all these doublets in QSOs tend to be fainter than [OIII], and that
some of them are affected by systematics.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
The long Galactic bar as seen by UKIDSS Galactic Plane Survey
Over the last decade there have been a series of results supporting the
hypothesis of the existence of a long thin bar in the Milky Way with a
half-length of 4.5 kpc and a position angle of around 45 deg. This is
apparently a very different structure from the triaxial bulge of the Galaxy,
which is thicker and shorter and dominates the star counts at |l|<10 deg. In
this paper, we analyse the stellar distribution in the inner Galaxy to see if
there is clear evidence for two triaxial or bar-like structures in the Milky
Way.
By using the red-clump population as a tracer of Galactic structure, we
determine the apparent morphology of the inner Galaxy. Deeper and higher
spatial resolution NIR photometry from the UKIDSS Galactic Plane Survey allows
us to use in-plane data even at the innermost Galactic longitudes, a region
where the source confusion is a dominant effect that makes it impossible to use
other NIR databases such as 2MASS or TCS-CAIN. We show that results previously
obtained with using the red-clump giants are confirmed with the in-plane data
from UKIDSS GPS. There are two different structures coexisting in the inner
Galactic plane: one with a position angle of 23.60+-2.19 deg that can be traced
from the Galactic Centre up to l=10 deg (the Galactic bulge), and other with a
larger position angle of 42.44+-2.14 deg, that ends around l=28 deg (the long
Galactic bar).Comment: (8 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
Tracing the long bar with red-clump giants
Over the last decade a series of results have lent support to the hypothesis
of the existence of a long thin bar in the Milky Way with a half-length of 4.5
kpc and a position angle of around 45 deg. This is apparently a very different
structure from the triaxial bulge of the Galaxy.
In this paper, we analyse the stellar distribution in the inner 4 kpc of the
Galaxy to see if there is clear evidence for two triaxial or barlike
structures, or whether there is only one. By using the red-clump population as
a tracer of the structure of the inner Galaxy we determine the apparent
morphology of the inner Galaxy. Star counts from 2MASS are used to provide
additional support for this analysis.
We show that there are two very different large-scale triaxial structures
coexisting in the inner Galaxy: a long thin stellar bar constrained to the
Galactic plane (|b|<2 deg) with a position angle of 43.1 +- 1.8 deg, and a
distinct triaxial bulge that extends to at least |b|<7.5 deg with a position
angle of 12.6 +- 3.2 deg. The scale height of the bar source distribution is
around 100 pc, whereas for the bulge the value of this parameter is five times
larger.Comment: 16 pages, 35 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Reaffirming the connection between the Galactic stellar warp and the Canis Major overdensity
We perform a critical re-analysis and discussion of recent results presented
in the literature which interpret the CMa overdensity as the signature of an
accreting dwarf galaxy or a new substructure within the Galaxy. Several issues
are addressed. We show that arguments against the ``warp'' interpretation are
based on an erroneous perception of the Milky Way. There is nothing anomalous
with colour--magnitude diagrams on opposite sides of the average warp mid-plane
being different. We witnessed the rise and fall of the blue plume population,
first attributed to young stars in a disrupting dwarf galaxy and now discarded
as a normal disc population. Similarly, there is nothing anomalous in the outer
thin+thick disc metallicities being low (-1<[Fe/H]<-0.5), and spiral arms (as
part of the thin disc) should, and do, warp. Most importantly, we show
unambiguously that, contrary to previous claims, the warp produces a stellar
overdensity that is distance-compatible with that observed in CMa.The CMa
over-density remains fully accounted for in a first order approach by Galactic
models without new substructures. Given the intrinsic uncertainties (concerning
the properties of the warp, flare and disc cutoff, the role of extinction and
degeneracy), minor deviations with respect to these models are not enough to
support the hypothesis of an accreted dwarf galaxy or new substructure within
the Milky Way disc.Comment: A&A Letter, accepted, 4 pages, 3 figure
RADIAL MOTIONS in DISK STARS: ELLIPTICITY or SECULAR FLOWS?
© 2016. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.. Average stellar orbits of the Galactic disk may have some small intrinsic ellipticity which breaks the exact axisymmetry and there may also be some migration of stars inwards or outwards. Both phenomena can be detected through kinematic analyses. We use the red clump stars selected spectroscopically from the APO Galactic Evolution Experiment, with known distances and radial velocities, to measure the radial component of the Galactocentric velocities within 5 kpc < R < 16 kpc, , and within 20° from the Sun-Galactic center line. The average Galactocentric radial velocity is VR = (1.48 ± 0.35)[R(kpc) - (8.8 ± 2.7)] km s-1 outwards in the explored range, with a higher contribution from stars below the Galactic plane. Two possible explanations can be given for this result: (i) the mean orbit of the disk stars is intrinsically elliptical with a Galactocentric radial gradient of eccentricity around 0.01 kpc-1; or (ii) there is a net secular expansion of the disk, in which stars within R ≈ 9-11 kpc are migrating to the region R 11 kpc at the rate of ∼2 Mo yr-1, and stars with R ≲ 9 kpc are falling toward the center of the Galaxy. This migration ratio would be unattainable for a long time and should decelerate, otherwise the Galaxy would fade away in around 1 Gyr. At present, both hypotheses are speculative and one would need data on the Galactocentric radial velocities for other azimuths different to the center or anticenter in order to confirm one of the scenarios
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