Artigo descreve a descoberta de um sistema de anéis 200 vezes maior do que o sistema de anéis de Saturno num exoplaneta orbitando a jovem estrela J1407
This pilot survey used modest aperture telescopes to image 8 nearby spiral galaxies in order to search for stellar tidal streams. Ultra-deep imaging revealed 6 previously undetected extensive (up to 30 kpc) stellar structures likely from tidally disrupted satellites. A diversity of tidal feature morphologies was found, including great circle-like streams, remote shells, and jets emerging from disks. Simulations predict tidal debris should be common and match the observed variety, providing evidence minor mergers have shaped disk galaxies since z=1.
Kinematics and simulations_of_the_stellar_stream_in_the_halo_of_the_umbrella_...Sérgio Sacani
This document summarizes a study of the stellar stream and substructures around the Umbrella Galaxy (NGC 4651). Deep imaging and spectroscopy were used to characterize the properties and kinematics of the stream. Tracer objects like globular clusters and planetary nebulae were identified and found to delineate a kinematically cold feature in position-velocity space. Dynamical modeling suggests the stream originated from the tidal disruption of a dwarf galaxy on a highly eccentric orbit about 6-10 billion years ago. This work demonstrates the feasibility of using discrete tracers to recover the kinematics and model the dynamics of low surface brightness stellar streams around distant galaxies.
New m embers_of_the_tw_hydrae_association_and_two_accreting_m_dwarfs_in_scorp...Sérgio Sacani
Uma descoberta acidental de uma coleção de jovens estrelas do tipo anãs vermelhas perto do nosso Sistema Solar, poderiam nos dar uma rara ideia da formação planetária em câmera lenta. Os astrônomos da The Australian National University a ANU e a University of New South Wales, a UNSW, em Canberra, descobriram grandes discos de poeira ao redor de duas estrelas, mostrando sinais de planetas em processo de formação.
“Nós achamos que a Terra e todos os planetas se formaram de discos como esses, assim é fascinante ver um potencial novo sistema solar se formando”, disse o principal pesquisador Dr. Simon Murphy, da ANU Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics.
“Contudo, outras estrelas dessa idade normalmente não têm mais discos. Os discos das anãs vermelhas parecem viver mais do que os de estrelas mais quentes como o Sol. Nós não entendemos por que”, disse o Dr. Murphy.
The Search for Distant Objects in the Solar System Using Spacewatch - Astrono...Eric Roe
This document describes a survey conducted by the Spacewatch Project to search for distant and slow-moving bright objects in the outer solar system beyond Neptune. The survey used data taken over 34 months with multiple night detections to achieve sensitivity to motions as slow as 0.012 arcsec/hr. This allowed the survey to be sensitive to Mars-sized objects out to 300 AU and Jupiter-sized planets out to 1200 AU. No large objects were found at low inclinations despite having sufficient sensitivity, allowing the authors to rule out more than one or two Pluto-sized objects to 100 AU and one or two Mars-sized objects to 200 AU for low inclinations.
The identification of_93_day_periodic_photometric_variability_for_yso_ylw_16aSérgio Sacani
This study identifies a 93 day periodic photometric variability in the Class I young stellar object (YSO) YLW 16A in the Rho Ophiuchus star forming region. Light curve analysis reveals variations of ~0.5 magnitudes in the Ks band over this period. The authors propose a triple system model consisting of an inner binary with a 93 day period eclipsed by a warped circumbinary disk, with a tertiary companion at ~40 AU responsible for warping the disk. This model is similar to one previously proposed for another YSO, WL 4, and may indicate such triple systems with eclipsing disks are common around young stars. Understanding these systems can provide insights into stellar and planetary formation and evolution.
This study analyzed high-resolution spectra of 125 compact stellar systems (CSSs) in the giant elliptical galaxy NGC 5128 to measure their radial velocities and velocity dispersions. Combining these measurements with structural parameters from imaging, dynamical masses were derived for 112 CSSs, including 89 for the first time. Two distinct sequences were found in the dynamical mass-to-light ratio vs dynamical mass plane, which can be approximated by power laws. The shallower sequence corresponds to bright globular clusters, while the steeper relation appears to be populated by objects requiring significant dark matter such as central black holes or concentrated dark matter. This suggests different formation histories for these CSSs compared to classical globular clusters in NGC 5128 and
Artigo descreve a descoberta de um sistema de anéis 200 vezes maior do que o sistema de anéis de Saturno num exoplaneta orbitando a jovem estrela J1407
This pilot survey used modest aperture telescopes to image 8 nearby spiral galaxies in order to search for stellar tidal streams. Ultra-deep imaging revealed 6 previously undetected extensive (up to 30 kpc) stellar structures likely from tidally disrupted satellites. A diversity of tidal feature morphologies was found, including great circle-like streams, remote shells, and jets emerging from disks. Simulations predict tidal debris should be common and match the observed variety, providing evidence minor mergers have shaped disk galaxies since z=1.
Kinematics and simulations_of_the_stellar_stream_in_the_halo_of_the_umbrella_...Sérgio Sacani
This document summarizes a study of the stellar stream and substructures around the Umbrella Galaxy (NGC 4651). Deep imaging and spectroscopy were used to characterize the properties and kinematics of the stream. Tracer objects like globular clusters and planetary nebulae were identified and found to delineate a kinematically cold feature in position-velocity space. Dynamical modeling suggests the stream originated from the tidal disruption of a dwarf galaxy on a highly eccentric orbit about 6-10 billion years ago. This work demonstrates the feasibility of using discrete tracers to recover the kinematics and model the dynamics of low surface brightness stellar streams around distant galaxies.
New m embers_of_the_tw_hydrae_association_and_two_accreting_m_dwarfs_in_scorp...Sérgio Sacani
Uma descoberta acidental de uma coleção de jovens estrelas do tipo anãs vermelhas perto do nosso Sistema Solar, poderiam nos dar uma rara ideia da formação planetária em câmera lenta. Os astrônomos da The Australian National University a ANU e a University of New South Wales, a UNSW, em Canberra, descobriram grandes discos de poeira ao redor de duas estrelas, mostrando sinais de planetas em processo de formação.
“Nós achamos que a Terra e todos os planetas se formaram de discos como esses, assim é fascinante ver um potencial novo sistema solar se formando”, disse o principal pesquisador Dr. Simon Murphy, da ANU Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics.
“Contudo, outras estrelas dessa idade normalmente não têm mais discos. Os discos das anãs vermelhas parecem viver mais do que os de estrelas mais quentes como o Sol. Nós não entendemos por que”, disse o Dr. Murphy.
The Search for Distant Objects in the Solar System Using Spacewatch - Astrono...Eric Roe
This document describes a survey conducted by the Spacewatch Project to search for distant and slow-moving bright objects in the outer solar system beyond Neptune. The survey used data taken over 34 months with multiple night detections to achieve sensitivity to motions as slow as 0.012 arcsec/hr. This allowed the survey to be sensitive to Mars-sized objects out to 300 AU and Jupiter-sized planets out to 1200 AU. No large objects were found at low inclinations despite having sufficient sensitivity, allowing the authors to rule out more than one or two Pluto-sized objects to 100 AU and one or two Mars-sized objects to 200 AU for low inclinations.
The identification of_93_day_periodic_photometric_variability_for_yso_ylw_16aSérgio Sacani
This study identifies a 93 day periodic photometric variability in the Class I young stellar object (YSO) YLW 16A in the Rho Ophiuchus star forming region. Light curve analysis reveals variations of ~0.5 magnitudes in the Ks band over this period. The authors propose a triple system model consisting of an inner binary with a 93 day period eclipsed by a warped circumbinary disk, with a tertiary companion at ~40 AU responsible for warping the disk. This model is similar to one previously proposed for another YSO, WL 4, and may indicate such triple systems with eclipsing disks are common around young stars. Understanding these systems can provide insights into stellar and planetary formation and evolution.
This study analyzed high-resolution spectra of 125 compact stellar systems (CSSs) in the giant elliptical galaxy NGC 5128 to measure their radial velocities and velocity dispersions. Combining these measurements with structural parameters from imaging, dynamical masses were derived for 112 CSSs, including 89 for the first time. Two distinct sequences were found in the dynamical mass-to-light ratio vs dynamical mass plane, which can be approximated by power laws. The shallower sequence corresponds to bright globular clusters, while the steeper relation appears to be populated by objects requiring significant dark matter such as central black holes or concentrated dark matter. This suggests different formation histories for these CSSs compared to classical globular clusters in NGC 5128 and
The physical conditions_in_a_pre_super_star_cluster_molecular_cloud_in_the_an...Sérgio Sacani
The document summarizes a study of an extreme molecular cloud in the Antennae galaxies that has properties consistent with forming a globular cluster. ALMA observations reveal a cloud with a radius of 24 pc and mass greater than 5 million solar masses. While capable of forming a globular cluster, a lack of associated thermal radio emission indicates star formation has not yet begun to alter the environment, suggesting the cloud is in an early stage of evolution. For the cloud to be confined as observed, an external pressure over 10,000 times greater than typical interstellar pressure is required, supporting the theory that high pressures are needed to form globular clusters in extreme environments like mergers.
1) High-resolution N-body simulations were conducted of isolated disk galaxies to explore the origin of spiral arms. Mass concentrations similar to giant molecular clouds were included to perturb the disks.
2) The simulations demonstrated that the disks developed long-lived, multi-armed spiral structures in response to the perturbations. This challenges the expectation that spiral arms should fade quickly once perturbations are removed.
3) Contrary to linear theories of spiral structure formation, the response of the disks to local perturbations was found to be highly non-linear and time-variable, significantly modifying the formation and longevity of spiral patterns.
This document summarizes the results of a deep near-infrared survey of the Carina Nebula complex using the HAWK-I instrument on the VLT. The survey imaged an area of 0.36 square degrees down to magnitudes of J=23, H=22, and Ks=21, detecting over 600,000 infrared sources. Color-magnitude diagrams of the sources were analyzed to determine properties of the low-mass stellar population such as ages and masses. The survey found that about 3200 sources have masses above 1 solar mass, consistent with expectations from the initial mass function. It also found that about half of the young stars in Carina are in a widely distributed, non-clustered configuration. Six
This document discusses how mathematics can be applied to geology and provides examples. It explains radiometric dating and how it is used to determine the age of rocks. It describes the internal structure of the Earth and how seismic wave behavior revealed insights about layers and discontinuities. It also discusses scientific notation and how it is used to represent huge and microscopic distances and dimensions.
How to tell an accreting boson star from a black hole h. olivares et al (2020)SOCIEDAD JULIO GARAVITO
Abstract
The tentative evidences for late time “echoes” in LIGO gravitational
waves (GWs) have been claimed to be signatures of horizonless compact
objects rather than vacuum black holes (BHs) possessing horizons. In
general, in the past, many authors have considered the possibility that
the so-called BHs might be only BH mimickers (BHMs). And recently
it has been suggested that the true astrophysical BH having no intrinsic
magnetic fields may be differentiated from magnetized BHMs by studying
the radial variations of magnetic fields around pertinent compact objects
(Lobanov, Nat. Astron. 2017). Here we highlight that close to the surface
of BHMs, the magnetic field pattern differs significantly from the same for
non-relativistic Neutron Stars (B ∼ r −3 ). In particular, we point out that
for ultra- compact BHMs, the polar field is weaker than the equatorial field
1by an extremely large factor of ∼ z s /lnz s , where z s ≫ 1 is the surface
gravitational redshift. We suggest that by studying the of radial variation
as well as such significant asymmetry of magnetic field structure near the
compact object, future observations may differentiate a theoretical black
hole from a astrophysical BH mimicker (a compact object). This study
also shows that even if some BHMs would be hypothesized to possess
magnetic fields even stronger than that of magnetars, in certain cases, they
may effectively behave as atoll type neutron stars possessing extremely low
magnetic fields.
Keywords: X-ray Binaries; Active Galactic Nuclei; Magnetic Field;
Black Hole Mimickers; Relativistic Astrophysics.
PACS numbers: 04.40.Dg, 97.80.Jp, 97.60.Gb, 95.86.Nv.
This document summarizes evidence that submillimeter galaxies (SMGs) at redshift 3-6 may be progenitors of compact quiescent galaxies observed at redshift 2. It compares properties of a sample of z~2 quiescent galaxies with a statistical sample of z>3 SMGs in the COSMOS field. It finds that the formation redshifts of the z~2 galaxies match the observed redshift distribution of z>3 SMGs. It also finds that the space densities and properties such as sizes, stellar masses, and internal velocities of the two populations are consistent with an evolutionary connection, assuming SMG starbursts have a duty cycle of 42+40 Myr. This suggests SMGs may represent an early burst
The xmm newton-view_of_the_central_degrees_of_the_milk_waySérgio Sacani
Novas imagens do Observatório de Raios-X XMM-Newton da ESA revelaram alguns dos processos mais intensos que acontecem no coração da nossa Via Láctea.
As fontes brilhantes e pontuais que se destacam por toda imagem indicam os sistemas estelares binários onde uma das estrelas atingiu o final de sua vida, desenvolvendo para um objeto compacto e denso – uma estrela de nêutrons ou um buraco negro.
A região central da Via Láctea também contém jovens estrelas e aglomerados estelares e algumas dessas fontes são visíveis como pontos brancos e vermelhos brilhando na imagem, que se espalha por 1000 anos-luz.
A maior parte da ação ocorre no centro, onde nuvens difusas de gás estão sendo cavadas por ventos poderosos soprados por estrelas jovens, bem como por supernovas.
One tenth solar_abundances_along_the_body_of-the_streamSérgio Sacani
This document summarizes a study that analyzed spectra from four background quasars to measure the chemical abundances along the Magellanic Stream. Two key findings are:
1) The sightlines toward RBS 144 and NGC 7714 yielded metallicities of around 0.1 times the solar value, indicating a uniform low abundance along the main body of the Stream. This supports models where the Stream was stripped from the SMC around 1-2.5 billion years ago when the SMC had a metallicity of around 0.1 solar.
2) A higher metallicity of around 0.5 solar was found in the inner Stream toward Fairall 9, sampling a filament traced to the LMC. This shows the bifurc
Candels the correlation_between_galaxy_morphology_and_star_formation_activity...Sérgio Sacani
This document summarizes a study investigating the relationship between galaxy morphology and star formation activity at z ~ 2 using a sample of 1,671 galaxies from CANDELS images in the GOODS-South field. The sample separates into massive, red, passive galaxies and less massive, blue, star-forming galaxies, correlating well with morphological properties. Star-forming galaxies show a variety of morphologies including clumpy structures and bulges mixed with faint disks, while passive galaxies often have compact morphologies resembling local spheroids. Similar trends are seen in local massive galaxies, suggesting the Hubble sequence was in place by z ~ 2.
This thesis examines methods for detecting and estimating the masses of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in bulgeless galaxies based on broad H-alpha emission lines. The author gathered a sample of 923 bulgeless galaxy candidates from Galaxy Zoo classifications of Sloan Digital Sky Survey images. Spectral data from SDSS was analyzed to measure properties of the H-alpha lines, which can indicate the presence of an SMBH according to the virial equation relating line width and luminosity to black hole mass. Estimated SMBH masses were compared to known relationships with host galaxy properties to test this method for identifying hidden SMBHs in bulgeless galaxies.
1. Chandra observations of the galaxy NGC 3351 revealed X-ray emission from its circumnuclear star-forming ring that is composed of numerous point-like sources embedded in diffuse hot gas.
2. The morphology of the X-ray emission is similar to but not identical with UV and H-alpha hot spots in the ring, which can be understood if star formation occurs through intermittent starbursts around the ring with different emissions tracing later evolutionary stages.
3. X-ray emission also extends beyond the ring, which is interpreted as outflowing gas from the ring into the disk and halo of NGC 3351, providing evidence for confined outflow near the plane but less restricted outflow perpendicular to
Disc dark matter_in_the_galaxy_and_potential_cycles_of_extraterrestrial_impac...Sérgio Sacani
This document discusses potential periodic cycles of extraterrestrial impacts, mass extinctions, and geological events on Earth. It proposes that:
1) Mass extinctions and impact cratering may exhibit cycles of around 26-30 million years that could be linked to the Sun's vertical oscillations through the Galactic plane around every 30-42 million years.
2) Near the Galactic plane, comets in the Oort Cloud could be perturbed by Galactic tidal forces and a possible thin dark matter disc, producing periodic comet showers and impacts on Earth linked to extinction events.
3) Records of geological events like tectonism and volcanism also show a potential cycle of around 30 million years that could be linked to the
The large-scale nebular pattern of a superwind binary in an eccentric orbitSérgio Sacani
Preplanetary nebulae and planetary nebulae are evolved,
mass-losing stellar objects that show a wide variety of morphologies.
Many of these nebulae consist of outer structures
that are nearly spherical (spiral/shell/arc/halo) and inner
structures that are highly asymmetric (bipolar/multipolar)1,2.
The coexistence of such geometrically distinct structures is
enigmatic because it hints at the simultaneous presence of
both wide and close binary interactions, a phenomenon that
has been attributed to stellar binary systems with eccentric
orbits3. Here, we report high-resolution molecular line observations
of the circumstellar spiral-shell pattern of AFGL 3068,
an asymptotic giant branch star transitioning to the preplanetary
nebula phase. The observations clearly reveal that the
dynamics of the mass loss is influenced by the presence of an
eccentric-orbit binary. This quintessential object opens a window
on the nature of deeply embedded binary stars through
the circumstellar spiral-shell patterns that reside at distances
of several thousand au from the stars.
The Copernicus-Kepler Model Modification: Gerges francis
Copernicus-Kepler Model Modification:
1- The sun is on the vertical level relative to the Earth.
2- All solar planets are found on the horizontal level relative to the Earth
3- The Sun is higher than the Earth, and higher than all solar planets
4- The straight line from the Sun to the Earth is the main line in the solar group
5- The planets revolve around this line, and not around the sun herself..
6- i.e. the Planets revolve around the line connected between the Sun and the Earth…
7- That means when the planet revolve around the sun, he will revolve around the Earth also because both of them connected by this same one line
8- That's why, the Ptolemy model lived very long time, because it was correct
9- So if the planet revolve around the sun or around the Earth the result will be the same, because both of them contributed to create the main line in the solar group
10- And because the sun is higher than the Earth, we see the sun hesitating motion to forward and backward with angle 63.7 degrees yearly, as a circle motion
11- So the sun circle motion is NOT true, but resulted from our wrong vision for the sun motion…
12- I claim, the planets from the Earth to Pluto move toward the sun, but Mercury and Venus move in the reverse direction
13- The Earth daily displacement toward the sun = 1 km
14- The previous modification can give us some explanation for the Egyptian astronomical phenomenon 2737, in which Mercury, Venus and Saturn were perpendicular on the Earth on 3/12/2012 (on the three Egyptian pyramids heads - appendix No.1),
15- Which proves, that the planets Not only revolve around the sun but also revolve around the Earth, supports this modification.
The Solar Planets Order Still Shows More Puzzles Gerges francis
This document discusses Mars immigration theory, which proposes that Mars originally orbited closer to the Sun at 84 million km before colliding with Venus and Earth and moving further out to its current orbit of 227.9 million km. This theory is argued to explain inconsistencies with the gravitational equation ordering of planets by mass. It is proposed that the collisions caused debris that formed the Earth's Moon and asteroid belt. Analysis of the relationships between planet diameters and orbital distances is presented to support Mars once having a larger diameter of 7070 km, which decreased due to the collisions.
The colision between_the_milky_way_and_andromedaSérgio Sacani
The document summarizes a simulation of the future collision between the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies. It finds that given current observational constraints on their distance, velocity, and masses:
1) The Milky Way and Andromeda are likely to collide in a few billion years, within the lifetime of the Sun.
2) During the interaction, there is a chance the Sun could be pulled into an extended tidal tail between the galaxies.
3) Eventually, after the merger is complete, the Sun would most likely be scattered to the outer halo of the merged galaxy at a distance over 30 kpc.
This study uses asteroseismology to reveal fast core rotation in red giant stars, finding that the cores rotate at least 10 times faster than the surface by analyzing rotational splitting of mixed modes. Mixed modes that probe the core show larger rotational splitting than modes dominated by the outer layers, indicating non-rigid rotation that increases towards the stellar interior. Models are able to reproduce the observations, confirming theoretical predictions of a steep rotational gradient within red giant cores.
1) The document discusses hunting for satellite galaxy clusters around more massive galaxy clusters detected in the XMM-XXL survey.
2) It uses galaxy selections from spectroscopic and photometric catalogs to identify overdensities around 11 clusters, finding 1 confirmed and 5 potential satellite clusters.
3) Masses are estimated for the potential satellites using their X-ray fluxes, and comparisons are made to simulations to validate the identified systems. However, follow-up observations are still needed to confirm the presence of the satellite candidates.
Wind from the_black_hole_accretion_disk_driving_a_molecular_outflow_in_an_act...Sérgio Sacani
Artigo descreve estudo inédito que mostra que os ventos gerados pelos buracos negros nos centros das galáxias pode acabar com o processo de formação de estrelas nas galáxias hospedeiras.
The physical conditions_in_a_pre_super_star_cluster_molecular_cloud_in_the_an...Sérgio Sacani
The document summarizes a study of an extreme molecular cloud in the Antennae galaxies that has properties consistent with forming a globular cluster. ALMA observations reveal a cloud with a radius of 24 pc and mass greater than 5 million solar masses. While capable of forming a globular cluster, a lack of associated thermal radio emission indicates star formation has not yet begun to alter the environment, suggesting the cloud is in an early stage of evolution. For the cloud to be confined as observed, an external pressure over 10,000 times greater than typical interstellar pressure is required, supporting the theory that high pressures are needed to form globular clusters in extreme environments like mergers.
1) High-resolution N-body simulations were conducted of isolated disk galaxies to explore the origin of spiral arms. Mass concentrations similar to giant molecular clouds were included to perturb the disks.
2) The simulations demonstrated that the disks developed long-lived, multi-armed spiral structures in response to the perturbations. This challenges the expectation that spiral arms should fade quickly once perturbations are removed.
3) Contrary to linear theories of spiral structure formation, the response of the disks to local perturbations was found to be highly non-linear and time-variable, significantly modifying the formation and longevity of spiral patterns.
This document summarizes the results of a deep near-infrared survey of the Carina Nebula complex using the HAWK-I instrument on the VLT. The survey imaged an area of 0.36 square degrees down to magnitudes of J=23, H=22, and Ks=21, detecting over 600,000 infrared sources. Color-magnitude diagrams of the sources were analyzed to determine properties of the low-mass stellar population such as ages and masses. The survey found that about 3200 sources have masses above 1 solar mass, consistent with expectations from the initial mass function. It also found that about half of the young stars in Carina are in a widely distributed, non-clustered configuration. Six
This document discusses how mathematics can be applied to geology and provides examples. It explains radiometric dating and how it is used to determine the age of rocks. It describes the internal structure of the Earth and how seismic wave behavior revealed insights about layers and discontinuities. It also discusses scientific notation and how it is used to represent huge and microscopic distances and dimensions.
How to tell an accreting boson star from a black hole h. olivares et al (2020)SOCIEDAD JULIO GARAVITO
Abstract
The tentative evidences for late time “echoes” in LIGO gravitational
waves (GWs) have been claimed to be signatures of horizonless compact
objects rather than vacuum black holes (BHs) possessing horizons. In
general, in the past, many authors have considered the possibility that
the so-called BHs might be only BH mimickers (BHMs). And recently
it has been suggested that the true astrophysical BH having no intrinsic
magnetic fields may be differentiated from magnetized BHMs by studying
the radial variations of magnetic fields around pertinent compact objects
(Lobanov, Nat. Astron. 2017). Here we highlight that close to the surface
of BHMs, the magnetic field pattern differs significantly from the same for
non-relativistic Neutron Stars (B ∼ r −3 ). In particular, we point out that
for ultra- compact BHMs, the polar field is weaker than the equatorial field
1by an extremely large factor of ∼ z s /lnz s , where z s ≫ 1 is the surface
gravitational redshift. We suggest that by studying the of radial variation
as well as such significant asymmetry of magnetic field structure near the
compact object, future observations may differentiate a theoretical black
hole from a astrophysical BH mimicker (a compact object). This study
also shows that even if some BHMs would be hypothesized to possess
magnetic fields even stronger than that of magnetars, in certain cases, they
may effectively behave as atoll type neutron stars possessing extremely low
magnetic fields.
Keywords: X-ray Binaries; Active Galactic Nuclei; Magnetic Field;
Black Hole Mimickers; Relativistic Astrophysics.
PACS numbers: 04.40.Dg, 97.80.Jp, 97.60.Gb, 95.86.Nv.
This document summarizes evidence that submillimeter galaxies (SMGs) at redshift 3-6 may be progenitors of compact quiescent galaxies observed at redshift 2. It compares properties of a sample of z~2 quiescent galaxies with a statistical sample of z>3 SMGs in the COSMOS field. It finds that the formation redshifts of the z~2 galaxies match the observed redshift distribution of z>3 SMGs. It also finds that the space densities and properties such as sizes, stellar masses, and internal velocities of the two populations are consistent with an evolutionary connection, assuming SMG starbursts have a duty cycle of 42+40 Myr. This suggests SMGs may represent an early burst
The xmm newton-view_of_the_central_degrees_of_the_milk_waySérgio Sacani
Novas imagens do Observatório de Raios-X XMM-Newton da ESA revelaram alguns dos processos mais intensos que acontecem no coração da nossa Via Láctea.
As fontes brilhantes e pontuais que se destacam por toda imagem indicam os sistemas estelares binários onde uma das estrelas atingiu o final de sua vida, desenvolvendo para um objeto compacto e denso – uma estrela de nêutrons ou um buraco negro.
A região central da Via Láctea também contém jovens estrelas e aglomerados estelares e algumas dessas fontes são visíveis como pontos brancos e vermelhos brilhando na imagem, que se espalha por 1000 anos-luz.
A maior parte da ação ocorre no centro, onde nuvens difusas de gás estão sendo cavadas por ventos poderosos soprados por estrelas jovens, bem como por supernovas.
One tenth solar_abundances_along_the_body_of-the_streamSérgio Sacani
This document summarizes a study that analyzed spectra from four background quasars to measure the chemical abundances along the Magellanic Stream. Two key findings are:
1) The sightlines toward RBS 144 and NGC 7714 yielded metallicities of around 0.1 times the solar value, indicating a uniform low abundance along the main body of the Stream. This supports models where the Stream was stripped from the SMC around 1-2.5 billion years ago when the SMC had a metallicity of around 0.1 solar.
2) A higher metallicity of around 0.5 solar was found in the inner Stream toward Fairall 9, sampling a filament traced to the LMC. This shows the bifurc
Candels the correlation_between_galaxy_morphology_and_star_formation_activity...Sérgio Sacani
This document summarizes a study investigating the relationship between galaxy morphology and star formation activity at z ~ 2 using a sample of 1,671 galaxies from CANDELS images in the GOODS-South field. The sample separates into massive, red, passive galaxies and less massive, blue, star-forming galaxies, correlating well with morphological properties. Star-forming galaxies show a variety of morphologies including clumpy structures and bulges mixed with faint disks, while passive galaxies often have compact morphologies resembling local spheroids. Similar trends are seen in local massive galaxies, suggesting the Hubble sequence was in place by z ~ 2.
This thesis examines methods for detecting and estimating the masses of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in bulgeless galaxies based on broad H-alpha emission lines. The author gathered a sample of 923 bulgeless galaxy candidates from Galaxy Zoo classifications of Sloan Digital Sky Survey images. Spectral data from SDSS was analyzed to measure properties of the H-alpha lines, which can indicate the presence of an SMBH according to the virial equation relating line width and luminosity to black hole mass. Estimated SMBH masses were compared to known relationships with host galaxy properties to test this method for identifying hidden SMBHs in bulgeless galaxies.
1. Chandra observations of the galaxy NGC 3351 revealed X-ray emission from its circumnuclear star-forming ring that is composed of numerous point-like sources embedded in diffuse hot gas.
2. The morphology of the X-ray emission is similar to but not identical with UV and H-alpha hot spots in the ring, which can be understood if star formation occurs through intermittent starbursts around the ring with different emissions tracing later evolutionary stages.
3. X-ray emission also extends beyond the ring, which is interpreted as outflowing gas from the ring into the disk and halo of NGC 3351, providing evidence for confined outflow near the plane but less restricted outflow perpendicular to
Disc dark matter_in_the_galaxy_and_potential_cycles_of_extraterrestrial_impac...Sérgio Sacani
This document discusses potential periodic cycles of extraterrestrial impacts, mass extinctions, and geological events on Earth. It proposes that:
1) Mass extinctions and impact cratering may exhibit cycles of around 26-30 million years that could be linked to the Sun's vertical oscillations through the Galactic plane around every 30-42 million years.
2) Near the Galactic plane, comets in the Oort Cloud could be perturbed by Galactic tidal forces and a possible thin dark matter disc, producing periodic comet showers and impacts on Earth linked to extinction events.
3) Records of geological events like tectonism and volcanism also show a potential cycle of around 30 million years that could be linked to the
The large-scale nebular pattern of a superwind binary in an eccentric orbitSérgio Sacani
Preplanetary nebulae and planetary nebulae are evolved,
mass-losing stellar objects that show a wide variety of morphologies.
Many of these nebulae consist of outer structures
that are nearly spherical (spiral/shell/arc/halo) and inner
structures that are highly asymmetric (bipolar/multipolar)1,2.
The coexistence of such geometrically distinct structures is
enigmatic because it hints at the simultaneous presence of
both wide and close binary interactions, a phenomenon that
has been attributed to stellar binary systems with eccentric
orbits3. Here, we report high-resolution molecular line observations
of the circumstellar spiral-shell pattern of AFGL 3068,
an asymptotic giant branch star transitioning to the preplanetary
nebula phase. The observations clearly reveal that the
dynamics of the mass loss is influenced by the presence of an
eccentric-orbit binary. This quintessential object opens a window
on the nature of deeply embedded binary stars through
the circumstellar spiral-shell patterns that reside at distances
of several thousand au from the stars.
The Copernicus-Kepler Model Modification: Gerges francis
Copernicus-Kepler Model Modification:
1- The sun is on the vertical level relative to the Earth.
2- All solar planets are found on the horizontal level relative to the Earth
3- The Sun is higher than the Earth, and higher than all solar planets
4- The straight line from the Sun to the Earth is the main line in the solar group
5- The planets revolve around this line, and not around the sun herself..
6- i.e. the Planets revolve around the line connected between the Sun and the Earth…
7- That means when the planet revolve around the sun, he will revolve around the Earth also because both of them connected by this same one line
8- That's why, the Ptolemy model lived very long time, because it was correct
9- So if the planet revolve around the sun or around the Earth the result will be the same, because both of them contributed to create the main line in the solar group
10- And because the sun is higher than the Earth, we see the sun hesitating motion to forward and backward with angle 63.7 degrees yearly, as a circle motion
11- So the sun circle motion is NOT true, but resulted from our wrong vision for the sun motion…
12- I claim, the planets from the Earth to Pluto move toward the sun, but Mercury and Venus move in the reverse direction
13- The Earth daily displacement toward the sun = 1 km
14- The previous modification can give us some explanation for the Egyptian astronomical phenomenon 2737, in which Mercury, Venus and Saturn were perpendicular on the Earth on 3/12/2012 (on the three Egyptian pyramids heads - appendix No.1),
15- Which proves, that the planets Not only revolve around the sun but also revolve around the Earth, supports this modification.
The Solar Planets Order Still Shows More Puzzles Gerges francis
This document discusses Mars immigration theory, which proposes that Mars originally orbited closer to the Sun at 84 million km before colliding with Venus and Earth and moving further out to its current orbit of 227.9 million km. This theory is argued to explain inconsistencies with the gravitational equation ordering of planets by mass. It is proposed that the collisions caused debris that formed the Earth's Moon and asteroid belt. Analysis of the relationships between planet diameters and orbital distances is presented to support Mars once having a larger diameter of 7070 km, which decreased due to the collisions.
The colision between_the_milky_way_and_andromedaSérgio Sacani
The document summarizes a simulation of the future collision between the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies. It finds that given current observational constraints on their distance, velocity, and masses:
1) The Milky Way and Andromeda are likely to collide in a few billion years, within the lifetime of the Sun.
2) During the interaction, there is a chance the Sun could be pulled into an extended tidal tail between the galaxies.
3) Eventually, after the merger is complete, the Sun would most likely be scattered to the outer halo of the merged galaxy at a distance over 30 kpc.
This study uses asteroseismology to reveal fast core rotation in red giant stars, finding that the cores rotate at least 10 times faster than the surface by analyzing rotational splitting of mixed modes. Mixed modes that probe the core show larger rotational splitting than modes dominated by the outer layers, indicating non-rigid rotation that increases towards the stellar interior. Models are able to reproduce the observations, confirming theoretical predictions of a steep rotational gradient within red giant cores.
1) The document discusses hunting for satellite galaxy clusters around more massive galaxy clusters detected in the XMM-XXL survey.
2) It uses galaxy selections from spectroscopic and photometric catalogs to identify overdensities around 11 clusters, finding 1 confirmed and 5 potential satellite clusters.
3) Masses are estimated for the potential satellites using their X-ray fluxes, and comparisons are made to simulations to validate the identified systems. However, follow-up observations are still needed to confirm the presence of the satellite candidates.
Wind from the_black_hole_accretion_disk_driving_a_molecular_outflow_in_an_act...Sérgio Sacani
Artigo descreve estudo inédito que mostra que os ventos gerados pelos buracos negros nos centros das galáxias pode acabar com o processo de formação de estrelas nas galáxias hospedeiras.
Gas physical conditions_and_kinematics_of_the_giant_outflow_ou4Sérgio Sacani
This document discusses observations of the giant outflow Ou4, located near the HII region Sh 2-129. Spectroscopic observations of Ou4 reveal shock-excited gas consistent with a fast collimated outflow. Mid-infrared images show a bubble of hot dust emission inside Ou4 that corresponds to [OIII] features. The distance and properties of Ou4 are consistent with it being launched about 90,000 years ago from the young massive star cluster HR 8119, located at the center of Sh 2-129. However, the possibility that Ou4 is a planetary nebula or resulted from an eruptive event on a massive asymptotic giant branch star cannot be ruled out.
Know the star_know_the_planet_discovery_of_l_ate_type_companions_to_two_exopl...Sérgio Sacani
This document summarizes the discovery of additional late-type stellar companions to two exoplanet host stars, HD 2638 and 30 Ari B, using adaptive optics imaging. For both systems, the companions were found to share common proper motion with the primaries, indicating they are physically associated. The estimated orbital periods of the new companions are 130 years for HD 2638 and 80 years for 30 Ari B. This makes 30 Ari B the second confirmed quadruple star system known to host an exoplanet. The discoveries provide additional examples of how binary companions can influence exoplanet dynamics and formation.
Artigo descreve a descoberta dos astrônomos de 4 imagens de uma supernova geradas pelo efeito de lente gravitacional e formando o raro padrão da Cruz de Einstein.
The behaviour of_dark_matter_associated_with_4_bright_cluster_galaxies_in_the...Sérgio Sacani
The document presents new Hubble Space Telescope imaging and Very Large Telescope integral-field spectroscopy of galaxy cluster Abell 3827. It finds that each of the four central galaxies in the cluster's 10 kpc core retains an associated massive dark matter halo. At least one galaxy is offset from its dark matter halo, with an offset of 1.62+0.50−0.47 kpc, within the uncertainties of mass modeling and statistical errors. If interpreted as evidence for self-interacting dark matter, this offset implies a dark matter self-interaction cross-section of (1.7 ± 0.7)×10−4 cm2/g.
The non gravitational_interactions_of_dark_matter_in_colliding_galaxy_clustersSérgio Sacani
1) The document analyzes 72 galaxy cluster collisions observed with Hubble and Chandra telescopes to test theories of non-gravitational dark matter interactions.
2) It detects the existence of dark matter at 7.6 sigma significance by comparing the positions of dark mass concentrations to stars and gas.
3) Combining measurements from all collisions, it constrains the dark matter self-interaction cross-section to be less than 0.47 cm^2/g (95% confidence level), ruling out some proposed dark matter models with stronger interactions.
Spitzer as microlens_parallax_satellite_mass_measurement_for_exoplanet_and_hi...Sérgio Sacani
This document summarizes a study using Spitzer and ground-based observations to measure the microlens parallax vector πE for the first time for a planetary microlensing event, OGLE-2014-BLG-0124L. The πE measurement allows the mass and distance of the planet and its host star to be determined. Spitzer observations provided a 2.5% precision measurement of πE, substantially improving upon the 22% precision from ground data alone. The planet has a mass of about 0.5 Jupiter masses and orbits a star of about 0.7 solar masses at a projected distance of about 3.1 AU.
Saturns fast spin_determined_from_its_gravitational_field_and_oblatenessSérgio Sacani
ARtigo descreve o novo método usado para determinar com precisão o período de rotação do planeta Saturno. Uma das grandes questões da astronomia. De acordo com o artigo o período de rotação de Saturno é de 10 horas 32 minutos e 45 segundos (+/- 46 segundos).
Old supernova dust_factory_revealed_at_galactic_centerSérgio Sacani
The document appears to be a research paper containing scientific data and analysis across multiple pages. It includes tables of data with numerical values and variables. The paper examines different regions and calculates total mass and ratios of mass between variables. Graphs and statistical analysis are referenced but not included.
The computational limit_to_quantum_determinism_and_the_black_hole_information...Sérgio Sacani
The document discusses the limits of quantum determinism and its implications for the black hole information paradox. It argues that assuming the Strong Exponential Time Hypothesis (SETH), which conjectures that known algorithms for solving computational NP-complete problems are optimal, quantum determinism cannot generally be used to predict the future state of a physical system, especially macroscopic systems. This is because even if the initial state were known precisely, it may be impossible in the real world to solve the system's Schrodinger equation in time to predict its final state before an observation. The breakdown of quantum determinism in black hole formation and evaporation may support SETH and help resolve the black hole information paradox.
Disks of Stars in the Galactic Center Triggered by Tidal Disruption EventsSérgio Sacani
This document proposes that tidal disruption events (TDEs) from wandering stars could trigger episodes of positive star formation feedback in the Galactic Center, providing an explanation for the observed disks of young stars near Sgr A*. When a star is tidally disrupted by the supermassive black hole, the resulting jet compresses gas clouds to densities high enough to resist tidal forces and form stars within the disk plane perpendicular to the jet. The estimated rate of jetted TDEs is consistent with the age of the disk stars. This mechanism predicts a random orientation for each disk and the potential for multiple misaligned disks from separate TDE events.
We present the 2020 version of the Siena Galaxy Atlas (SGA-2020), a multiwavelength optical and infrared
imaging atlas of 383,620 nearby galaxies. The SGA-2020 uses optical grz imaging over ≈20,000 deg2 from the
Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) Legacy Imaging Surveys Data Release 9 and infrared imaging in
four bands (spanning 3.4–22 μm) from the 6 year unWISE coadds; it is more than 95% complete for galaxies larger
than R(26) ≈ 25″ and r < 18 measured at the 26 mag arcsec−2 isophote in the r band. The atlas delivers precise
coordinates, multiwavelength mosaics, azimuthally averaged optical surface-brightness profiles, model images and
photometry, and additional ancillary metadata for the full sample. Coupled with existing and forthcoming optical
spectroscopy from the DESI, the SGA-2020 will facilitate new detailed studies of the star formation and mass
assembly histories of nearby galaxies; enable precise measurements of the local velocity field via the Tully–Fisher
and fundamental plane relations; serve as a reference sample of lasting legacy value for time-domain and
multimessenger astronomical events; and more.
The SPHERE view of three interacting twin disc systems in polarised lightSérgio Sacani
Dense stellar environments as hosts of ongoing star formation increase the probability of gravitational encounters among stellar
systems during the early stages of evolution. Stellar interaction may occur through non-recurring, hyperbolic or parabolic passages
(a so-called ‘fly-by’), through secular binary evolution, or through binary capture. In all three scenarios, the strong gravitational
perturbation is expected to manifest itself in the disc structures around the individual stars. Here, we present near-infrared
polarised light observations that were taken with the SPHERE/IRDIS instrument of three known interacting twin-disc systems:
AS 205, EM* SR 24, and FU Orionis. The scattered light exposes spirals likely caused by the gravitational interaction. On
a larger scale, we observe connecting filaments between the stars. We analyse their very complex polarised intensity and put
particular attention to the presence of multiple light sources in these systems. The local angle of linear polarisation indicates
the source whose light dominates the scattering process from the bridging region between the two stars. Further, we show
that the polarised intensity from scattering with multiple relevant light sources results from an incoherent summation of the
individuals’ contribution. This can produce nulls of polarised intensity in an image, as potentially observed in AS 205.We discuss
the geometry and content of the systems by comparing the polarised light observations with other data at similar resolution,
namely with ALMA continuum and gas emission. Collective observational data can constrain the systems’ geometry and stellar
trajectories, with the important potential to differentiate between dynamical scenarios of stellar interaction.
This summarizes a scientific study on long-distance quantum teleportation between two laboratories separated by 55 meters but connected by 2 kilometers of fiber optic cable. The key points are:
1) Researchers teleported quantum states (qubits) carried by photons at 1.3 micrometer wavelengths onto photons at 1.55 micrometer wavelengths between the two laboratories.
2) The qubits were encoded in time-bin superpositions and entanglement rather than polarization to make them more robust against decoherence in optical fibers.
3) A partial Bell state measurement was performed using linear optics at the receiving end to probabilistically teleport the quantum states over the long distance.
This document summarizes a study that identified 195 compact elliptical galaxies across different environments using data from optical and ultraviolet sky surveys. The researchers constructed the sample by selecting galaxies that were outliers from the universal color-magnitude relation and had small sizes and high stellar velocity dispersions based on spectral modeling. They found that 7 of the galaxies were isolated, not belonging to any known galaxy groups. For these isolated galaxies, the researchers identified possible host galaxies located up to 3.3 Mpc away. The stellar populations of the isolated compact elliptical galaxies were found to be similar to those in galaxy groups and clusters, suggesting a common formation mechanism.
Lenz et al. discovered that soft particles at the nano- and microscale can form "clumpy crystals" where particles partially overlap and form regular lattices of clumps. This challenges ideas that soft materials will behave similarly to atomic and molecular systems. The discovery provides another example of how soft materials display unconventional behavior. An analysis of the satellites orbiting Andromeda found that about half are rotating coherently in a thin planar structure, providing a new constraint on galaxy formation theories. Further evidence suggests organized planar distributions of satellites may be common for nearby galaxy groups. The findings compound issues with the number of predicted versus observed satellites and suggest the structures themselves are not ancient.
Uma espetacular colisão de galáxias foi descoberta além da Via Láctea. O sistema mais próximo já descoberto, a identificação foi anunciada por uma equipe de astrônomos liderada pelo Professor Quentin Parker da Universidade de Hong Kong e pelo Professor Albert Zijlstra na Universidade de Manchester.
A galáxia está a 30 milhões de anos-luz de distância, o que significa que ela é relativamente próxima. Ela foi chamada de Roda de Kathryn, em homenagem à sua semelhança com o famoso fogo de artifício e também em homenagem à esposa do coautor do trabalho.
Esses sistemas são muito raros e nascem da colisão entre duas galáxias de tamanhos similares. As ondas de choque geradas na colisão comprimem o reservatório de gás em cada galáxia e disparam a formação de novas estrelas. Isso cria um espetacular anel de intensa emissão, e ilumina o sistema, do mesmo modo que a Roda Catherine ilumina a noite num show de fogos de artifício.
As galáxias crescem através de colisões, mas é raro registrar esse processo acontecendo, e é extremamente raro ver o anel da colisão em progresso. Pouco mais de 20 sistemas com anéis completos são conhecidos.
HST imaging of star-forming clumps in 6 GASP ram-pressure stripped galaxiesSérgio Sacani
Exploiting broad- and narrow-band images of the Hubble Space Telescope from near-UV to I-band
restframe, we study the star-forming clumps of six galaxies of the GASP sample undergoing strong
ram-pressure stripping (RPS). Clumps are detected in Hα and near-UV, tracing star formation on
different timescales. We consider clumps located in galaxy disks, in the stripped tails and those
formed in stripped gas but still close to the disk, called extraplanar. We detect 2406 Hα-selected
clumps (1708 in disks, 375 in extraplanar regions, and 323 in tails) and 3750 UV-selected clumps (2026
disk clumps, 825 extraplanar clumps and 899 tail clumps). Only ∼ 15% of star-forming clumps are
spatially resolved, meaning that most are smaller than ∼ 140 pc. We study the luminosity and size
distribution functions (LDFs and SDFs, respectively) and the luminosity-size relation. The average
LDF slope is 1.79 ± 0.09, while the average SDF slope is 3.1 ± 0.5. Results suggest the star formation
to be turbulence driven and scale-free, as in main-sequence galaxies. All the clumps, whether they are
in the disks or in the tails, have an enhanced Hα luminosity at a given size, compared to the clumps in
main-sequence galaxies. Indeed, their Hα luminosity is closer to that of clumps in starburst galaxies,
indicating that ram pressure is able to enhance the luminosity. No striking differences are found among
disk and tail clumps, suggesting that the different environments in which they are embedded play a
minor role in influencing the star formation.
HST imaging of star-forming clumps in 6 GASP ram-pressure stripped galaxiesSérgio Sacani
Exploiting broad- and narrow-band images of the Hubble Space Telescope from near-UV to I-band
restframe, we study the star-forming clumps of six galaxies of the GASP sample undergoing strong
ram-pressure stripping (RPS). Clumps are detected in Hα and near-UV, tracing star formation on
different timescales. We consider clumps located in galaxy disks, in the stripped tails and those
formed in stripped gas but still close to the disk, called extraplanar. We detect 2406 Hα-selected
clumps (1708 in disks, 375 in extraplanar regions, and 323 in tails) and 3750 UV-selected clumps (2026
disk clumps, 825 extraplanar clumps and 899 tail clumps). Only ∼ 15% of star-forming clumps are
spatially resolved, meaning that most are smaller than ∼ 140 pc. We study the luminosity and size
distribution functions (LDFs and SDFs, respectively) and the luminosity-size relation. The average
LDF slope is 1.79 ± 0.09, while the average SDF slope is 3.1 ± 0.5. Results suggest the star formation
to be turbulence driven and scale-free, as in main-sequence galaxies. All the clumps, whether they are
in the disks or in the tails, have an enhanced Hα luminosity at a given size, compared to the clumps in
main-sequence galaxies. Indeed, their Hα luminosity is closer to that of clumps in starburst galaxies,
indicating that ram pressure is able to enhance the luminosity. No striking differences are found among
disk and tail clumps, suggesting that the different environments in which they are embedded play a
minor role in influencing the star formation.
HST imaging of star-forming clumps in 6 GASP ram-pressure stripped galaxiesSérgio Sacani
Exploiting broad- and narrow-band images of the Hubble Space Telescope from near-UV to I-band
restframe, we study the star-forming clumps of six galaxies of the GASP sample undergoing strong
ram-pressure stripping (RPS). Clumps are detected in Hα and near-UV, tracing star formation on
different timescales. We consider clumps located in galaxy disks, in the stripped tails and those
formed in stripped gas but still close to the disk, called extraplanar. We detect 2406 Hα-selected
clumps (1708 in disks, 375 in extraplanar regions, and 323 in tails) and 3750 UV-selected clumps (2026
disk clumps, 825 extraplanar clumps and 899 tail clumps). Only ∼ 15% of star-forming clumps are
spatially resolved, meaning that most are smaller than ∼ 140 pc. We study the luminosity and size
distribution functions (LDFs and SDFs, respectively) and the luminosity-size relation. The average
LDF slope is 1.79 ± 0.09, while the average SDF slope is 3.1 ± 0.5. Results suggest the star formation
to be turbulence driven and scale-free, as in main-sequence galaxies. All the clumps, whether they are
in the disks or in the tails, have an enhanced Hα luminosity at a given size, compared to the clumps in
main-sequence galaxies. Indeed, their Hα luminosity is closer to that of clumps in starburst galaxies,
indicating that ram pressure is able to enhance the luminosity. No striking differences are found among
disk and tail clumps, suggesting that the different environments in which they are embedded play a
minor role in influencing the star formation.
We present deep optical images of the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC) using
a low cost telephoto lens with a wide field of view to explore stellar substructure in the outskirts
of the stellar disk of the LMC (r < 10 degrees from the center). These data have higher resolution
than existing star count maps, and highlight the existence of stellar arcs and multiple spiral arms in
the northern periphery, with no comparable counterparts in the South. We compare these data to
detailed simulations of the LMC disk outskirts, following interactions with its low mass companion,
the SMC. We consider interaction in isolation and with the inclusion of the Milky Way tidal field.
The simulations are used to assess the origin of the northern structures, including also the low density
stellar arc recently identified in the DES data by Mackey et al. (2015) at ∼ 15 degrees. We conclude
that repeated close interactions with the SMC are primarily responsible for the asymmetric stellar
structures seen in the periphery of the LMC. The orientation and density of these arcs can be used to
constrain the LMC’s interaction history with and impact parameter of the SMC. More generally, we
find that such asymmetric structures should be ubiquitous about pairs of dwarfs and can persist for
1-2 Gyr even after the secondary merges entirely with the primary. As such, the lack of a companion
around a Magellanic Irregular does not disprove the hypothesis that their asymmetric structures are
driven by dwarf-dwarf interactions.
Asymmetrical tidal tails of open star clusters: stars crossing their cluster’...Sérgio Sacani
The document discusses asymmetrical tidal tails observed around five open star clusters, which challenges Newtonian gravity. It summarizes how tidal tails form as stars escape clusters due to energy equipartition. Observations of the Hyades, Praesepe, Coma Berenices, COIN-Gaia 13, and NGC 752 clusters found more stars in the leading tidal tails within 50 pc of the clusters. Simulations show that in Newtonian gravity, tidal tails should be symmetrical, but asymmetries can arise in Milgromian dynamics. Future work is needed to better map tidal tails and develop Milgromian simulations.
The Expansion of the X-Ray Nebula Around η CarSérgio Sacani
1. The author analyzes over 20 years of Chandra X-ray images to measure for the first time the expansion of the X-ray nebula around η Carinae.
2. A combined Chandra image reveals a faint, nearly uniform elliptical shell surrounding the X-ray bright ring, with a similar orientation and shape as the Homunculus nebula but about 3 times larger.
3. The author measures proper motions of brighter regions associated with the X-ray emitting ring, such as the S-ridge and W-arc. Motions are consistent with optical studies of ejecta from the 1840s Great Eruption.
UV and Hα HST observations of 6 GASP jellyfish galaxiesSérgio Sacani
Star-forming, Hα-emitting clumps are found embedded in the gaseous tails of galaxies undergoing
intense ram pressure stripping in galaxy clusters, so-called jellyfish galaxies. These clumps offer a
unique opportunity to study star formation under extreme conditions, in the absence of an underlying
disk and embedded within the hot intracluster medium. Yet, a comprehensive, high spatial resolution
study of these systems is missing. We obtained UVIS/HST data to observe the first statistical sample
of clumps in the tails and disks of six jellyfish galaxies from the GASP survey; we used a combination
of broad-band (UV to I) filters and a narrow-band Hα filter. HST observations are needed to study
the sizes, stellar masses and ages of the clumps and their clustering hierarchy. These observations will
be used to study the clump scaling relations, the universality of the star formation process and verify
whether a disk is irrelevant, as hinted by jellyfish galaxy results. This paper presents the observations,
data reduction strategy, and some general results based on the preliminary data analysis. The UVIS
high spatial resolution gives an unprecedented sharp view of the complex structure of the inner regions
of the galaxies and of the substructures in the galaxy disks. We found clear signatures of stripping
in regions very close in projection to the galactic disk. The star-forming regions in the stripped tails
are extremely bright and compact while we did not detect a significant number of star-forming clumps
outside those detected by MUSE. The paper finally presents the development plan for the project.
UV and Hα HST observations of 6 GASP jellyfish galaxiesSérgio Sacani
Star-forming, Hα-emitting clumps are found embedded in the gaseous tails of galaxies undergoing
intense ram pressure stripping in galaxy clusters, so-called jellyfish galaxies. These clumps offer a
unique opportunity to study star formation under extreme conditions, in the absence of an underlying
disk and embedded within the hot intracluster medium. Yet, a comprehensive, high spatial resolution
study of these systems is missing. We obtained UVIS/HST data to observe the first statistical sample
of clumps in the tails and disks of six jellyfish galaxies from the GASP survey; we used a combination
of broad-band (UV to I) filters and a narrow-band Hα filter. HST observations are needed to study
the sizes, stellar masses and ages of the clumps and their clustering hierarchy. These observations will
be used to study the clump scaling relations, the universality of the star formation process and verify
whether a disk is irrelevant, as hinted by jellyfish galaxy results. This paper presents the observations,
data reduction strategy, and some general results based on the preliminary data analysis. The UVIS
high spatial resolution gives an unprecedented sharp view of the complex structure of the inner regions
of the galaxies and of the substructures in the galaxy disks. We found clear signatures of stripping
in regions very close in projection to the galactic disk. The star-forming regions in the stripped tails
are extremely bright and compact while we did not detect a significant number of star-forming clumps
outside those detected by MUSE. The paper finally presents the development plan for the project.
UV and Hα HST observations of 6 GASP jellyfish galaxiesSérgio Sacani
Star-forming, Hα-emitting clumps are found embedded in the gaseous tails of galaxies undergoing
intense ram pressure stripping in galaxy clusters, so-called jellyfish galaxies. These clumps offer a
unique opportunity to study star formation under extreme conditions, in the absence of an underlying
disk and embedded within the hot intracluster medium. Yet, a comprehensive, high spatial resolution
study of these systems is missing. We obtained UVIS/HST data to observe the first statistical sample
of clumps in the tails and disks of six jellyfish galaxies from the GASP survey; we used a combination
of broad-band (UV to I) filters and a narrow-band Hα filter. HST observations are needed to study
the sizes, stellar masses and ages of the clumps and their clustering hierarchy. These observations will
be used to study the clump scaling relations, the universality of the star formation process and verify
whether a disk is irrelevant, as hinted by jellyfish galaxy results. This paper presents the observations,
data reduction strategy, and some general results based on the preliminary data analysis. The UVIS
high spatial resolution gives an unprecedented sharp view of the complex structure of the inner regions
of the galaxies and of the substructures in the galaxy disks. We found clear signatures of stripping
in regions very close in projection to the galactic disk. The star-forming regions in the stripped tails
are extremely bright and compact while we did not detect a significant number of star-forming clumps
outside those detected by MUSE. The paper finally presents the development plan for the project.
Lunar ejecta origin of near-Earth asteroid Kamo’oalewa is compatible with rar...Sérgio Sacani
Near-Earth asteroid, Kamo’oalewa (469219), is one of a small number of known quasisatellites of Earth; it transitions between quasi-satellite and horseshoe orbital states on
centennial timescales, maintaining this dynamics over megayears. The similarity of its
reflectance spectrum to lunar silicates and its Earth-like orbit both suggest that it originated
from the lunar surface. Here we carry out numerical simulations of the dynamical evolution of
particles launched from different locations on the lunar surface with a range of ejection
velocities in order to assess the hypothesis that Kamo‘oalewa originated as a debris-fragment
from a meteoroidal impact with the lunar surface. As these ejecta escape the Earth-Moon
environment, they face a dynamical barrier for entry into Earth’s co-orbital space. However, a
small fraction of launch conditions yields outcomes that are compatible with Kamo‘oalewa’s
orbit. The most favored conditions are launch velocities slightly above the escape velocity
from the trailing lunar hemisphere.
Dust-trapping Vortices and a Potentially Planet-triggered Spiral Wake in the ...Sérgio Sacani
The radial drift problem constitutes one of the most fundamental problems in planet formation theory, as it predicts
particles to drift into the star before they are able to grow to planetesimal size. Dust-trapping vortices have been
proposed as a possible solution to this problem, as they might be able to trap particles over millions of years,
allowing them to grow beyond the radial drift barrier. Here, we present ALMA 0 04 resolution imaging of the pretransitional
disk of V1247 Orionis that reveals an asymmetric ring as well as a sharply confined crescent structure,
resembling morphologies seen in theoretical models of vortex formation. The asymmetric ring (at 0 17 = 54 au
separation from the star) and the crescent (at 0 38 = 120 au) seem smoothly connected through a one-armed
spiral-arm structure that has been found previously in scattered light. We propose a physical scenario with a planet
orbiting at ∼0 3 ≈ 100 au, where the one-armed spiral arm detected in polarized light traces the accretion stream
feeding the protoplanet. The dynamical influence of the planet clears the gap between the ring and the crescent and
triggers two vortices that trap millimeter-sized particles, namely, the crescent and the bright asymmetry seen in the
ring. We conducted dedicated hydrodynamics simulations of a disk with an embedded planet, which results in
similar spiral-arm morphologies as seen in our scattered-light images. At the position of the spiral wake and the
crescent we also observe 12CO(3-2) and H12CO+ (4-3) excess line emission, likely tracing the increased scaleheight
in these disk regions.
Detection of anisotropic satellite quenching in galaxy clusters up to z ∼ 1Sérgio Sacani
Satellite galaxies in the cluster environment are more likely to be quenched than galaxies in the general field. Recently, it has
been reported that satellite galaxy quenching depends on the orientation relative to their central galaxies: satellites along the
major axis of centrals are more likely to be quenched than those along the minor axis. In this paper, we report a detection
of such anisotropic quenching up to z ∼ 1 based on a large optically selected cluster catalogue constructed from the Hyper
Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program. We calculate the quiescent satellite galaxy fraction as a function of orientation angle
measured from the major axis of central galaxies and find that the quiescent fractions at 0.25 < z < 1 are reasonably fitted
by sinusoidal functions with amplitudes of a few per cent. Anisotropy is clearer in inner regions (<r200m) of clusters and not
significant in cluster outskirts (>r200m). We also confirm that the observed anisotropy cannot be explained by differences in
local galaxy density or stellar mass distribution along the two axes. Quiescent fraction excesses between the two axes suggest
that the quenching efficiency contributing to the anisotropy is almost independent of stellar mass, at least down to our stellar
mass limit of M∗ = 1 × 1010 M. Finally, we argue that the physical origins of the observed anisotropy should have shorter
quenching time-scales than ∼ 1 Gyr, like ram-pressure stripping, because, for anisotropic quenching to be observed, satellites
must be quenched before their initial orientation angles are significantly changed.
The article discusses observations from multiple space-based observatories that tracked a sun-diving comet, C/2011 N3 (SOHO), as it passed through the Sun's corona and disintegrated. The observatories captured details of the comet's flight path, emissions, and disintegration over time. Studying how comets interact with and break apart in the corona can provide insights into comet composition and the early solar system.
Similar to Rings and radial_waves_in_the_disk_of_the_milk_way (20)
The binding of cosmological structures by massless topological defectsSérgio Sacani
Assuming spherical symmetry and weak field, it is shown that if one solves the Poisson equation or the Einstein field
equations sourced by a topological defect, i.e. a singularity of a very specific form, the result is a localized gravitational
field capable of driving flat rotation (i.e. Keplerian circular orbits at a constant speed for all radii) of test masses on a thin
spherical shell without any underlying mass. Moreover, a large-scale structure which exploits this solution by assembling
concentrically a number of such topological defects can establish a flat stellar or galactic rotation curve, and can also deflect
light in the same manner as an equipotential (isothermal) sphere. Thus, the need for dark matter or modified gravity theory is
mitigated, at least in part.
EWOCS-I: The catalog of X-ray sources in Westerlund 1 from the Extended Weste...Sérgio Sacani
Context. With a mass exceeding several 104 M⊙ and a rich and dense population of massive stars, supermassive young star clusters
represent the most massive star-forming environment that is dominated by the feedback from massive stars and gravitational interactions
among stars.
Aims. In this paper we present the Extended Westerlund 1 and 2 Open Clusters Survey (EWOCS) project, which aims to investigate
the influence of the starburst environment on the formation of stars and planets, and on the evolution of both low and high mass stars.
The primary targets of this project are Westerlund 1 and 2, the closest supermassive star clusters to the Sun.
Methods. The project is based primarily on recent observations conducted with the Chandra and JWST observatories. Specifically,
the Chandra survey of Westerlund 1 consists of 36 new ACIS-I observations, nearly co-pointed, for a total exposure time of 1 Msec.
Additionally, we included 8 archival Chandra/ACIS-S observations. This paper presents the resulting catalog of X-ray sources within
and around Westerlund 1. Sources were detected by combining various existing methods, and photon extraction and source validation
were carried out using the ACIS-Extract software.
Results. The EWOCS X-ray catalog comprises 5963 validated sources out of the 9420 initially provided to ACIS-Extract, reaching a
photon flux threshold of approximately 2 × 10−8 photons cm−2
s
−1
. The X-ray sources exhibit a highly concentrated spatial distribution,
with 1075 sources located within the central 1 arcmin. We have successfully detected X-ray emissions from 126 out of the 166 known
massive stars of the cluster, and we have collected over 71 000 photons from the magnetar CXO J164710.20-455217.
The debris of the ‘last major merger’ is dynamically youngSérgio Sacani
The Milky Way’s (MW) inner stellar halo contains an [Fe/H]-rich component with highly eccentric orbits, often referred to as the
‘last major merger.’ Hypotheses for the origin of this component include Gaia-Sausage/Enceladus (GSE), where the progenitor
collided with the MW proto-disc 8–11 Gyr ago, and the Virgo Radial Merger (VRM), where the progenitor collided with the
MW disc within the last 3 Gyr. These two scenarios make different predictions about observable structure in local phase space,
because the morphology of debris depends on how long it has had to phase mix. The recently identified phase-space folds in Gaia
DR3 have positive caustic velocities, making them fundamentally different than the phase-mixed chevrons found in simulations
at late times. Roughly 20 per cent of the stars in the prograde local stellar halo are associated with the observed caustics. Based
on a simple phase-mixing model, the observed number of caustics are consistent with a merger that occurred 1–2 Gyr ago.
We also compare the observed phase-space distribution to FIRE-2 Latte simulations of GSE-like mergers, using a quantitative
measurement of phase mixing (2D causticality). The observed local phase-space distribution best matches the simulated data
1–2 Gyr after collision, and certainly not later than 3 Gyr. This is further evidence that the progenitor of the ‘last major merger’
did not collide with the MW proto-disc at early times, as is thought for the GSE, but instead collided with the MW disc within
the last few Gyr, consistent with the body of work surrounding the VRM.
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
on Io’s surface have been monitored from both spacecraft and ground-based telescopes.
Here, we present the highest spatial resolution images of Io ever obtained from a groundbased telescope. These images, acquired by the SHARK-VIS instrument on the Large
Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
optics at visible wavelengths.
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
THE IMPORTANCE OF MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE SAMPLE RETURN.Sérgio Sacani
The return of a sample of near-surface atmosphere from Mars would facilitate answers to several first-order science questions surrounding the formation and evolution of the planet. One of the important aspects of terrestrial planet formation in general is the role that primary atmospheres played in influencing the chemistry and structure of the planets and their antecedents. Studies of the martian atmosphere can be used to investigate the role of a primary atmosphere in its history. Atmosphere samples would also inform our understanding of the near-surface chemistry of the planet, and ultimately the prospects for life. High-precision isotopic analyses of constituent gases are needed to address these questions, requiring that the analyses are made on returned samples rather than in situ.
Multi-source connectivity as the driver of solar wind variability in the heli...Sérgio Sacani
The ambient solar wind that flls the heliosphere originates from multiple
sources in the solar corona and is highly structured. It is often described
as high-speed, relatively homogeneous, plasma streams from coronal
holes and slow-speed, highly variable, streams whose source regions are
under debate. A key goal of ESA/NASA’s Solar Orbiter mission is to identify
solar wind sources and understand what drives the complexity seen in the
heliosphere. By combining magnetic feld modelling and spectroscopic
techniques with high-resolution observations and measurements, we show
that the solar wind variability detected in situ by Solar Orbiter in March
2022 is driven by spatio-temporal changes in the magnetic connectivity to
multiple sources in the solar atmosphere. The magnetic feld footpoints
connected to the spacecraft moved from the boundaries of a coronal hole
to one active region (12961) and then across to another region (12957). This
is refected in the in situ measurements, which show the transition from fast
to highly Alfvénic then to slow solar wind that is disrupted by the arrival of
a coronal mass ejection. Our results describe solar wind variability at 0.5 au
but are applicable to near-Earth observatories.
Gliese 12 b: A Temperate Earth-sized Planet at 12 pc Ideal for Atmospheric Tr...Sérgio Sacani
Recent discoveries of Earth-sized planets transiting nearby M dwarfs have made it possible to characterize the
atmospheres of terrestrial planets via follow-up spectroscopic observations. However, the number of such planets
receiving low insolation is still small, limiting our ability to understand the diversity of the atmospheric
composition and climates of temperate terrestrial planets. We report the discovery of an Earth-sized planet
transiting the nearby (12 pc) inactive M3.0 dwarf Gliese 12 (TOI-6251) with an orbital period (Porb) of 12.76 days.
The planet, Gliese 12 b, was initially identified as a candidate with an ambiguous Porb from TESS data. We
confirmed the transit signal and Porb using ground-based photometry with MuSCAT2 and MuSCAT3, and
validated the planetary nature of the signal using high-resolution images from Gemini/NIRI and Keck/NIRC2 as
well as radial velocity (RV) measurements from the InfraRed Doppler instrument on the Subaru 8.2 m telescope
and from CARMENES on the CAHA 3.5 m telescope. X-ray observations with XMM-Newton showed the host
star is inactive, with an X-ray-to-bolometric luminosity ratio of log 5.7 L L X bol » - . Joint analysis of the light
curves and RV measurements revealed that Gliese 12 b has a radius of 0.96 ± 0.05 R⊕,a3σ mass upper limit of
3.9 M⊕, and an equilibrium temperature of 315 ± 6 K assuming zero albedo. The transmission spectroscopy metric
(TSM) value of Gliese 12 b is close to the TSM values of the TRAPPIST-1 planets, adding Gliese 12 b to the small
list of potentially terrestrial, temperate planets amenable to atmospheric characterization with JWST.
Gliese 12 b, a temperate Earth-sized planet at 12 parsecs discovered with TES...Sérgio Sacani
We report on the discovery of Gliese 12 b, the nearest transiting temperate, Earth-sized planet found to date. Gliese 12 is a
bright (V = 12.6 mag, K = 7.8 mag) metal-poor M4V star only 12.162 ± 0.005 pc away from the Solar system with one of the
lowest stellar activity levels known for M-dwarfs. A planet candidate was detected by TESS based on only 3 transits in sectors
42, 43, and 57, with an ambiguity in the orbital period due to observational gaps. We performed follow-up transit observations
with CHEOPS and ground-based photometry with MINERVA-Australis, SPECULOOS, and Purple Mountain Observatory,
as well as further TESS observations in sector 70. We statistically validate Gliese 12 b as a planet with an orbital period of
12.76144 ± 0.00006 d and a radius of 1.0 ± 0.1 R⊕, resulting in an equilibrium temperature of ∼315 K. Gliese 12 b has excellent
future prospects for precise mass measurement, which may inform how planetary internal structure is affected by the stellar
compositional environment. Gliese 12 b also represents one of the best targets to study whether Earth-like planets orbiting cool
stars can retain their atmospheres, a crucial step to advance our understanding of habitability on Earth and across the galaxy.
The importance of continents, oceans and plate tectonics for the evolution of...Sérgio Sacani
Within the uncertainties of involved astronomical and biological parameters, the Drake Equation
typically predicts that there should be many exoplanets in our galaxy hosting active, communicative
civilizations (ACCs). These optimistic calculations are however not supported by evidence, which is
often referred to as the Fermi Paradox. Here, we elaborate on this long-standing enigma by showing
the importance of planetary tectonic style for biological evolution. We summarize growing evidence
that a prolonged transition from Mesoproterozoic active single lid tectonics (1.6 to 1.0 Ga) to modern
plate tectonics occurred in the Neoproterozoic Era (1.0 to 0.541 Ga), which dramatically accelerated
emergence and evolution of complex species. We further suggest that both continents and oceans
are required for ACCs because early evolution of simple life must happen in water but late evolution
of advanced life capable of creating technology must happen on land. We resolve the Fermi Paradox
(1) by adding two additional terms to the Drake Equation: foc
(the fraction of habitable exoplanets
with significant continents and oceans) and fpt
(the fraction of habitable exoplanets with significant
continents and oceans that have had plate tectonics operating for at least 0.5 Ga); and (2) by
demonstrating that the product of foc
and fpt
is very small (< 0.00003–0.002). We propose that the lack
of evidence for ACCs reflects the scarcity of long-lived plate tectonics and/or continents and oceans on
exoplanets with primitive life.
A Giant Impact Origin for the First Subduction on EarthSérgio Sacani
Hadean zircons provide a potential record of Earth's earliest subduction 4.3 billion years ago. Itremains enigmatic how subduction could be initiated so soon after the presumably Moon‐forming giant impact(MGI). Earlier studies found an increase in Earth's core‐mantle boundary (CMB) temperature due to theaccumulation of the impactor's core, and our recent work shows Earth's lower mantle remains largely solid, withsome of the impactor's mantle potentially surviving as the large low‐shear velocity provinces (LLSVPs). Here,we show that a hot post‐impact CMB drives the initiation of strong mantle plumes that can induce subductioninitiation ∼200 Myr after the MGI. 2D and 3D thermomechanical computations show that a high CMBtemperature is the primary factor triggering early subduction, with enrichment of heat‐producing elements inLLSVPs as another potential factor. The models link the earliest subduction to the MGI with implications forunderstanding the diverse tectonic regimes of rocky planets.
Climate extremes likely to drive land mammal extinction during next supercont...Sérgio Sacani
Mammals have dominated Earth for approximately 55 Myr thanks to their
adaptations and resilience to warming and cooling during the Cenozoic. All
life will eventually perish in a runaway greenhouse once absorbed solar
radiation exceeds the emission of thermal radiation in several billions of
years. However, conditions rendering the Earth naturally inhospitable to
mammals may develop sooner because of long-term processes linked to
plate tectonics (short-term perturbations are not considered here). In
~250 Myr, all continents will converge to form Earth’s next supercontinent,
Pangea Ultima. A natural consequence of the creation and decay of Pangea
Ultima will be extremes in pCO2 due to changes in volcanic rifting and
outgassing. Here we show that increased pCO2, solar energy (F⨀;
approximately +2.5% W m−2 greater than today) and continentality (larger
range in temperatures away from the ocean) lead to increasing warming
hostile to mammalian life. We assess their impact on mammalian
physiological limits (dry bulb, wet bulb and Humidex heat stress indicators)
as well as a planetary habitability index. Given mammals’ continued survival,
predicted background pCO2 levels of 410–816 ppm combined with increased
F⨀ will probably lead to a climate tipping point and their mass extinction.
The results also highlight how global landmass configuration, pCO2 and F⨀
play a critical role in planetary habitability.
Constraints on Neutrino Natal Kicks from Black-Hole Binary VFTS 243Sérgio Sacani
The recently reported observation of VFTS 243 is the first example of a massive black-hole binary
system with negligible binary interaction following black-hole formation. The black-hole mass (≈10M⊙)
and near-circular orbit (e ≈ 0.02) of VFTS 243 suggest that the progenitor star experienced complete
collapse, with energy-momentum being lost predominantly through neutrinos. VFTS 243 enables us to
constrain the natal kick and neutrino-emission asymmetry during black-hole formation. At 68% confidence
level, the natal kick velocity (mass decrement) is ≲10 km=s (≲1.0M⊙), with a full probability distribution
that peaks when ≈0.3M⊙ were ejected, presumably in neutrinos, and the black hole experienced a natal
kick of 4 km=s. The neutrino-emission asymmetry is ≲4%, with best fit values of ∼0–0.2%. Such a small
neutrino natal kick accompanying black-hole formation is in agreement with theoretical predictions.
Detectability of Solar Panels as a TechnosignatureSérgio Sacani
In this work, we assess the potential detectability of solar panels made of silicon on an Earth-like
exoplanet as a potential technosignature. Silicon-based photovoltaic cells have high reflectance in the
UV-VIS and in the near-IR, within the wavelength range of a space-based flagship mission concept
like the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO). Assuming that only solar energy is used to provide
the 2022 human energy needs with a land cover of ∼ 2.4%, and projecting the future energy demand
assuming various growth-rate scenarios, we assess the detectability with an 8 m HWO-like telescope.
Assuming the most favorable viewing orientation, and focusing on the strong absorption edge in the
ultraviolet-to-visible (0.34 − 0.52 µm), we find that several 100s of hours of observation time is needed
to reach a SNR of 5 for an Earth-like planet around a Sun-like star at 10pc, even with a solar panel
coverage of ∼ 23% land coverage of a future Earth. We discuss the necessity of concepts like Kardeshev
Type I/II civilizations and Dyson spheres, which would aim to harness vast amounts of energy. Even
with much larger populations than today, the total energy use of human civilization would be orders of
magnitude below the threshold for causing direct thermal heating or reaching the scale of a Kardashev
Type I civilization. Any extraterrrestrial civilization that likewise achieves sustainable population
levels may also find a limit on its need to expand, which suggests that a galaxy-spanning civilization
as imagined in the Fermi paradox may not exist.
Jet reorientation in central galaxies of clusters and groups: insights from V...Sérgio Sacani
Recent observations of galaxy clusters and groups with misalignments between their central AGN jets
and X-ray cavities, or with multiple misaligned cavities, have raised concerns about the jet – bubble
connection in cooling cores, and the processes responsible for jet realignment. To investigate the
frequency and causes of such misalignments, we construct a sample of 16 cool core galaxy clusters and
groups. Using VLBA radio data we measure the parsec-scale position angle of the jets, and compare
it with the position angle of the X-ray cavities detected in Chandra data. Using the overall sample
and selected subsets, we consistently find that there is a 30% – 38% chance to find a misalignment
larger than ∆Ψ = 45◦ when observing a cluster/group with a detected jet and at least one cavity. We
determine that projection may account for an apparently large ∆Ψ only in a fraction of objects (∼35%),
and given that gas dynamical disturbances (as sloshing) are found in both aligned and misaligned
systems, we exclude environmental perturbation as the main driver of cavity – jet misalignment.
Moreover, we find that large misalignments (up to ∼ 90◦
) are favored over smaller ones (45◦ ≤ ∆Ψ ≤
70◦
), and that the change in jet direction can occur on timescales between one and a few tens of Myr.
We conclude that misalignments are more likely related to actual reorientation of the jet axis, and we
discuss several engine-based mechanisms that may cause these dramatic changes.
The solar dynamo begins near the surfaceSérgio Sacani
The magnetic dynamo cycle of the Sun features a distinct pattern: a propagating
region of sunspot emergence appears around 30° latitude and vanishes near the
equator every 11 years (ref. 1). Moreover, longitudinal flows called torsional oscillations
closely shadow sunspot migration, undoubtedly sharing a common cause2. Contrary
to theories suggesting deep origins of these phenomena, helioseismology pinpoints
low-latitude torsional oscillations to the outer 5–10% of the Sun, the near-surface
shear layer3,4. Within this zone, inwardly increasing differential rotation coupled with
a poloidal magnetic field strongly implicates the magneto-rotational instability5,6,
prominent in accretion-disk theory and observed in laboratory experiments7.
Together, these two facts prompt the general question: whether the solar dynamo is
possibly a near-surface instability. Here we report strong affirmative evidence in stark
contrast to traditional models8 focusing on the deeper tachocline. Simple analytic
estimates show that the near-surface magneto-rotational instability better explains
the spatiotemporal scales of the torsional oscillations and inferred subsurface
magnetic field amplitudes9. State-of-the-art numerical simulations corroborate these
estimates and reproduce hemispherical magnetic current helicity laws10. The dynamo
resulting from a well-understood near-surface phenomenon improves prospects
for accurate predictions of full magnetic cycles and space weather, affecting the
electromagnetic infrastructure of Earth.
Extensive Pollution of Uranus and Neptune’s Atmospheres by Upsweep of Icy Mat...Sérgio Sacani
In the Nice model of solar system formation, Uranus and Neptune undergo an orbital upheaval,
sweeping through a planetesimal disk. The region of the disk from which material is accreted by
the ice giants during this phase of their evolution has not previously been identified. We perform
direct N-body orbital simulations of the four giant planets to determine the amount and origin of solid
accretion during this orbital upheaval. We find that the ice giants undergo an extreme bombardment
event, with collision rates as much as ∼3 per hour assuming km-sized planetesimals, increasing the
total planet mass by up to ∼0.35%. In all cases, the initially outermost ice giant experiences the
largest total enhancement. We determine that for some plausible planetesimal properties, the resulting
atmospheric enrichment could potentially produce sufficient latent heat to alter the planetary cooling
timescale according to existing models. Our findings suggest that substantial accretion during this
phase of planetary evolution may have been sufficient to impact the atmospheric composition and
thermal evolution of the ice giants, motivating future work on the fate of deposited solid material.
Exomoons & Exorings with the Habitable Worlds Observatory I: On the Detection...Sérgio Sacani
The highest priority recommendation of the Astro2020 Decadal Survey for space-based astronomy
was the construction of an observatory capable of characterizing habitable worlds. In this paper series
we explore the detectability of and interference from exomoons and exorings serendipitously observed
with the proposed Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) as it seeks to characterize exoplanets, starting
in this manuscript with Earth-Moon analog mutual events. Unlike transits, which only occur in systems
viewed near edge-on, shadow (i.e., solar eclipse) and lunar eclipse mutual events occur in almost every
star-planet-moon system. The cadence of these events can vary widely from ∼yearly to multiple events
per day, as was the case in our younger Earth-Moon system. Leveraging previous space-based (EPOXI)
lightcurves of a Moon transit and performance predictions from the LUVOIR-B concept, we derive
the detectability of Moon analogs with HWO. We determine that Earth-Moon analogs are detectable
with observation of ∼2-20 mutual events for systems within 10 pc, and larger moons should remain
detectable out to 20 pc. We explore the extent to which exomoon mutual events can mimic planet
features and weather. We find that HWO wavelength coverage in the near-IR, specifically in the 1.4 µm
water band where large moons can outshine their host planet, will aid in differentiating exomoon signals
from exoplanet variability. Finally, we predict that exomoons formed through collision processes akin
to our Moon are more likely to be detected in younger systems, where shorter orbital periods and
favorable geometry enhance the probability and frequency of mutual events.
Emergent ribozyme behaviors in oxychlorine brines indicate a unique niche for...Sérgio Sacani
Mars is a particularly attractive candidate among known astronomical objects
to potentially host life. Results from space exploration missions have provided
insights into Martian geochemistry that indicate oxychlorine species, particularly perchlorate, are ubiquitous features of the Martian geochemical landscape. Perchlorate presents potential obstacles for known forms of life due to
its toxicity. However, it can also provide potential benefits, such as producing
brines by deliquescence, like those thought to exist on present-day Mars. Here
we show perchlorate brines support folding and catalysis of functional RNAs,
while inactivating representative protein enzymes. Additionally, we show
perchlorate and other oxychlorine species enable ribozyme functions,
including homeostasis-like regulatory behavior and ribozyme-catalyzed
chlorination of organic molecules. We suggest nucleic acids are uniquely wellsuited to hypersaline Martian environments. Furthermore, Martian near- or
subsurface oxychlorine brines, and brines found in potential lifeforms, could
provide a unique niche for biomolecular evolution.
Continuum emission from within the plunging region of black hole discsSérgio Sacani
The thermal continuum emission observed from accreting black holes across X-ray bands has the potential to be leveraged as a
powerful probe of the mass and spin of the central black hole. The vast majority of existing ‘continuum fitting’ models neglect
emission sourced at and within the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) of the black hole. Numerical simulations, however,
find non-zero emission sourced from these regions. In this work, we extend existing techniques by including the emission
sourced from within the plunging region, utilizing new analytical models that reproduce the properties of numerical accretion
simulations. We show that in general the neglected intra-ISCO emission produces a hot-and-small quasi-blackbody component,
but can also produce a weak power-law tail for more extreme parameter regions. A similar hot-and-small blackbody component
has been added in by hand in an ad hoc manner to previous analyses of X-ray binary spectra. We show that the X-ray spectrum
of MAXI J1820+070 in a soft-state outburst is extremely well described by a full Kerr black hole disc, while conventional
models that neglect intra-ISCO emission are unable to reproduce the data. We believe this represents the first robust detection of
intra-ISCO emission in the literature, and allows additional constraints to be placed on the MAXI J1820 + 070 black hole spin
which must be low a• < 0.5 to allow a detectable intra-ISCO region. Emission from within the ISCO is the dominant emission
component in the MAXI J1820 + 070 spectrum between 6 and 10 keV, highlighting the necessity of including this region. Our
continuum fitting model is made publicly available.
ESA/ACT Science Coffee: Diego Blas - Gravitational wave detection with orbita...Advanced-Concepts-Team
Presentation in the Science Coffee of the Advanced Concepts Team of the European Space Agency on the 07.06.2024.
Speaker: Diego Blas (IFAE/ICREA)
Title: Gravitational wave detection with orbital motion of Moon and artificial
Abstract:
In this talk I will describe some recent ideas to find gravitational waves from supermassive black holes or of primordial origin by studying their secular effect on the orbital motion of the Moon or satellites that are laser ranged.
Mending Clothing to Support Sustainable Fashion_CIMaR 2024.pdfSelcen Ozturkcan
Ozturkcan, S., Berndt, A., & Angelakis, A. (2024). Mending clothing to support sustainable fashion. Presented at the 31st Annual Conference by the Consortium for International Marketing Research (CIMaR), 10-13 Jun 2024, University of Gävle, Sweden.
PPT on Direct Seeded Rice presented at the three-day 'Training and Validation Workshop on Modules of Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) Technologies in South Asia' workshop on April 22, 2024.
Current Ms word generated power point presentation covers major details about the micronuclei test. It's significance and assays to conduct it. It is used to detect the micronuclei formation inside the cells of nearly every multicellular organism. It's formation takes place during chromosomal sepration at metaphase.
ESR spectroscopy in liquid food and beverages.pptxPRIYANKA PATEL
With increasing population, people need to rely on packaged food stuffs. Packaging of food materials requires the preservation of food. There are various methods for the treatment of food to preserve them and irradiation treatment of food is one of them. It is the most common and the most harmless method for the food preservation as it does not alter the necessary micronutrients of food materials. Although irradiated food doesn’t cause any harm to the human health but still the quality assessment of food is required to provide consumers with necessary information about the food. ESR spectroscopy is the most sophisticated way to investigate the quality of the food and the free radicals induced during the processing of the food. ESR spin trapping technique is useful for the detection of highly unstable radicals in the food. The antioxidant capability of liquid food and beverages in mainly performed by spin trapping technique.
Or: Beyond linear.
Abstract: Equivariant neural networks are neural networks that incorporate symmetries. The nonlinear activation functions in these networks result in interesting nonlinear equivariant maps between simple representations, and motivate the key player of this talk: piecewise linear representation theory.
Disclaimer: No one is perfect, so please mind that there might be mistakes and typos.
dtubbenhauer@gmail.com
Corrected slides: dtubbenhauer.com/talks.html
hematic appreciation test is a psychological assessment tool used to measure an individual's appreciation and understanding of specific themes or topics. This test helps to evaluate an individual's ability to connect different ideas and concepts within a given theme, as well as their overall comprehension and interpretation skills. The results of the test can provide valuable insights into an individual's cognitive abilities, creativity, and critical thinking skills
The cost of acquiring information by natural selectionCarl Bergstrom
This is a short talk that I gave at the Banff International Research Station workshop on Modeling and Theory in Population Biology. The idea is to try to understand how the burden of natural selection relates to the amount of information that selection puts into the genome.
It's based on the first part of this research paper:
The cost of information acquisition by natural selection
Ryan Seamus McGee, Olivia Kosterlitz, Artem Kaznatcheev, Benjamin Kerr, Carl T. Bergstrom
bioRxiv 2022.07.02.498577; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.07.02.498577
Rings and radial_waves_in_the_disk_of_the_milk_way
1. arXiv:1503.00257v1[astro-ph.GA]1Mar2015
Rings and Radial Waves in the Disk of the Milky Way
Yan Xu1,2, Heidi Jo Newberg2, Jeffrey L. Carlin2, Chao Liu1, Licai Deng1, Jing Li3,
Ralph Sch¨onrich 4, & Brian Yanny5
ABSTRACT
We show that in the anticenter region, between Galactic longitudes of 110◦
<
l < 229◦
, there is an oscillating asymmetry in the main sequence star counts on
either side of the Galactic plane using data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
This asymmetry oscillates from more stars in the north at distances of about 2 kpc
from the Sun to more stars in the south at 4-6 kpc from the Sun to more stars in
the north at distances of 8-10 kpc from the Sun. We also see evidence that there
are more stars in the south at distances of 12-16 kpc from the Sun. The three more
distant asymmetries form roughly concentric rings around the Galactic center,
opening in the direction of the Milky Way’s spiral arms. The northern ring, 9
kpc from the Sun, is easily identified with the previously discovered Monoceros
Ring. Parts of the southern ring at 14 kpc from the Sun (which we call the
TriAnd Ring) have previously been identified as related to the Monoceros Ring
and others have been called the Triangulum Andromeda Overdensity. The two
nearer oscillations are approximated by a toy model in which the disk plane is
offset by of the order 100 pc up and then down at different radii. We also show
that the disk is not azimuthally symmetric around the Galactic anticenter and
that there could be a correspondence between our observed oscillations and the
spiral structure of the Galaxy. Our observations suggest that the TriAnd and
Monoceros Rings (which extend to at least 25 kpc from the Galactic center) are
primarily the result of disk oscillations.
1
National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100012, PR
China;xuyan@bao.ac.cn
2
Dept. of Physics, Applied Physics and Astronomy, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, NY 12180
3
Key Laboratory for Research in Galaxies and Cosmology, Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, Chinese
Academy of Sciences,80 Nandan Road, Shanghai 200030, China
4
Rudolf-Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford, 1 Keble Road, OX1 3NP, UK
5
Experimental Astrophysics Group, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory,PO Box 500, Batavia, IL
60510
2. – 2 –
1. Introduction
The disk of the Milky Way galaxy is typically modeled with two double exponential
density functions - one for the thin disk and one for the thick disk. This density function
is a good fit to the star counts regardless of whether there are two distinct components, or
a continuum from lower scale height and higher metallicity to higher scale height and lower
metallicity. However, recent studies of the disk component of the Milky have uncovered disk
warps, asymmetries in the star counts above and below the disk, and bulk motion of the
disk that is inconsistent with our exponential disk profile.
More than a decade ago, an apparent ring of stars was discovered at low Galactic latitude
near the Galactic anti-center, at an estimated distance of 18 kpc from the Galactic center
(Newberg et al. 2002; Yanny et al. 2003; Li et al. 2012); this structure has been called the
Monoceros Ring, but some authors have called it the Monoceros Overdensity or the Galactic
Anticenter Stellar Stream (Crane et al. 2003; Rocha-Pinto et al. 2003). After more than a
decade, it is still uncertain whether this structure is associated with the disk (a warp, flare,
wave perturbation or spiral arm) or the halo component of the Milky Way (dwarf galaxy
accretion). Initially, the community was divided over the origin of the Monoceros Ring,
which was thought to be associated with an accreting dwarf galaxy (Martin et al. 2004;
Pe˜narrubia et al. 2005), or the normal Galactic warp/flare profiles (Momany et al. 2004,
2006).
More recently the possibility that the structures are a result of an encounter with a
massive satellite (Kazantzidis et al. 2008; Younger et al. 2008) has been put forward; it is
suggested that the massive satellite could be the Sagitarius dwarf galaxy (Purcell et al.
2011). Evidence for oscillations of the disk in Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data (SDSS; York et
al. 1999) was put forward by G´omez et al. (2012); Widrow et al. (2012); Yanny & Gardner
(2013). Velocity substructure in the disk that could be caused by a wavelike perturbation of
the disk was also seen by Williams et al. (2013) in data from the RAdial Velocity Experiment
(Steinmetz et al. 2006), and by Carlin et al. (2013) in data from the Large Area Multi-Object
Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST; Cui et al. 2012, Deng et al. 2012, Zhao et al. 2012)
survey. The debate over the origin of the velocity structure has just begun; Faure et al.
(2014) have recently suggested that both radial and vertical flows, as seen by these surveys,
can be induced by Galactic spiral arms. However, their models produce vertical flows from
heating rather than vertical motion of the disk midplane. This contrasts with the affects
of satellites; satellites passing through the disk with lower infall velocity produce bending
modes while satellites with larger infall velocities produce breathing modes (Widrow et al.
2014). Bending modes would cause bulk vertical motion of the disk midplane.
At the same time, the debate over the nature of the Monoceros Ring still goes on.
3. – 3 –
Sollima et al. (2011) look at deep imaging with the CFHT MegaCam, and conclude that the
density is not consistent with extragalactic models; thus they favor an accretion origin for
the structure. Conn et al. (2012) look at the star counts with deep imaging from Subaru,
and claim to see a wall of stars at 10 kpc from the Sun, with a distance that does not
change with longitude. They claim that the Monoceros ring, at ([Fe/H]∼ −1.0), is more
metal-rich than nearby stars, and that the perturbed disk model does not reproduce the
observed density profile. Since they expect a flare would produce too high a metallicity,
they therefore also favor a satellite origin for the structure. One difficulty with a satellite
origin is that it is difficult to get an accreting satellite into a circular orbit. However,
Michel-Dansac et al. (2011) found a way to put the progenitor of the Monoceros ring into
a circular orbit by having it collide with the Sagittarius dwarf (or similar) galaxy. On the
other hand, L´opez-Corredoira & Molg´o (2014) argue that the disk flares can explain the
Monoceros Ring, and also explain why the disk appears to end 15 kpc from the Galactic
center. In their words, “the hypothesis to interpret the Monoceros ring in terms of a tidal
stream of a putative accreted dwarf galaxy is not only unnecessary because the observed
flare explains the overdensity in the Monoceros ring observed in SDSS fields, but it appears
to be inappropriate.”
The Monoceros Ring is not the only unexplained density structure near the Galactic
anticenter. Rocha-Pinto et al. (2004); Majewski et al. (2004) identified a density structure
(in M giants and main sequence stars, respectively) at low (absolute) latitude, south of
the Galactic plane, with Galactic longitude of 100◦
< l < 150◦
. Dubbed the Triangulum
Andromeda Stream (TriAnd), this structure is 20-30 kpc from the Sun and further from
the Galactic center than the Monoceros Ring. Martin et al. (2007) identify two faint
main sequences, in the foreground of the Andromeda galaxy, and dub the more distant,
lower contrast one “TriAnd2.” Although it has been suggested that the Monoceros Ring and
TriAnd might be different parts of the same tidal stream (Pe˜narrubia et al. 2005), Chou et al.
(2011) find different metallicities for the two substructures.
Recently, several papers have presented evidence for substructure within TriAnd. Martin et al.
(2014) map five structures in the direction of the Andromeda galaxy using the Pan-Andromeda
Archaeological Survey (PAndAS; McConnachie et al. 2009). In addition to structures that
they identify as the Monoceros Ring (Ibata et al. 2003; though we argue below that this is
not the Monoceros Ring), the TriAnd Stream (Rocha-Pinto et al. 2003), TriAnd2 (Martin
et al. 2007), the Pisces globular cluster stream (Bonaca et al. 2012; Martin et al. 2013);
they find two odd substructures that look like a narrow stellar stream (the PAndAS MW
stream) and a “blob” (the PAndAS NE blob) at the same distance as the TriAnd Stream.
Sheffield et al. (2014) find considerably different ages (and possibly metallicity) from main
sequence fitting of TriAnd and TriAnd2 (using 2MASS M giants and optical main sequence
4. – 4 –
/turnoff features), and suggest that they could be debris from the same dwarf galaxy that
was torn off on different pericentric passages near the Galactic center. Deason et al. (2014)
use data from the Spectroscopic and Photometric Landscape of Andromeda’s Stellar Halo
(SPLASH;Guhathakurta et al. 2006;Gilbert et al. 2012) and Sloan Extension for Galac-
tic Understanding and Exploration (SEGUE; Yanny et al. 2009) spectroscopic surveys to
suggest that TriAnd may be the result of group infall to the Milky Way. They note that
the PAndAS stream and the SEGUE 2 dwarf galaxy (Belokurov et al. 2009) have the same
position and line-of-sight velocity as TriAnd.
Substructure is also apparent in the Monoceros Ring (Li et al. 2012). Grillmair (2006)
finds at least three substructures in the Monoceros Ring, including two or more narrow
substreams as well as a broader, diffuse component. He suggests “the progenitor of the
stream was likely a dwarf galaxy of significant size and mass.” Grillmair (2011) find an
eccentric orbit and possible progenitor for the Eastern Banded Structure (EBS), that is also
at low Galactic latitude and at the same distance as the Monoceros Ring. More recently,
data from Pan-STARRS1 (K. C. Chambers et al., in preparation) was used to create maps of
the stellar density near the Galactic anticenter, showing that the Monoceros Ring is observed
over 130◦
of Galactic longitude, in the range −25◦
< b < 30◦
(Slater et al. 2014). They show
that this structure exhibits complex structure; the southern part is ∼ 5.5 kpc from the Sun,
while the northern part is ∼ 9.5 kpc from the Sun. They show that current models of tidal
disruption and disk distortion do not reproduce the observed substructure. However, it is
possible that fine tuning of the parameters in these models to match the new data could
yield better agreement.
The evidence for tidal debris in the Monoceros and TriAnd structures, especially with
the suggestion that tidal debris may have come into the Milky Way in groups, leads some
authors to conclude these larger structures are formed through accretion. Clearly, other
authors are adamant that at least the Monoceros Ring is due to a flaring of the disk. And
more recently evidence is put forward that disk wiggles (which could themselves be influenced
by dwarf galaxy accretion or spiral arms) could be associated with the Monoceros Ring.
It is with this history that we re-examine a mystery that existed in the original paper
that showed for the first time that the halo of the Milky Way is lumpy, and that there is
an apparent ring of stars 20 kpc from the center of the Milky Way (the Monoceros Ring).
The wedge plot in Figure 1 of Newberg et al. (2002) also shows other structure near the
Galactic plane. This figure shows the density of turnoff stars with 0.1 < (g − r)0 < 0.3
on the Celestial Equator. In particular, if one looks in the direction (l, b) = (223◦
, 20◦
)
in that figure, there are two apparent “lumps” standing out from the smooth background:
the one at g0 ∼ 19.5 is associated with the Monoceros Ring, but there is another similar-
5. – 5 –
looking overdensity at g0 ∼ 16.5. In the direction (l, b) = (200◦
, −24◦
), there is an apparent
overdensity at g0 ∼ 17.5, in addition to the structure at g0 ∼ 19.8 that is identified in this
paper as possibly part of what is now called the Monoceros Ring.
In the Newberg et al. (2002) paper, the nearer overdensities were assumed to be some-
how associated with the disk of the Milky Way, while the more distant Monoceros Ring was
not. This is because a reasonable thick disk model could produce a peak in the star counts
at bright magnitudes and low Galactic latitudes; it could not reproduce the Monoceros Ring
in part because the disk was not thought to extend past 15 kpc from the Galactic center.
Additionally, a specially tuned flaring of the disk at 20 kpc from the Galactic center was
necessary to match the high scale height and narrow apparent magnitude distribution of the
stars in the ring.
In this paper, we set out to determine whether the nearer low Galactic latitude struc-
tures, both above and below the Galactic plane, could be explained by a thin or thick disk.
We found that, like the Monoceros structure, they did not fit in with a standard disk model.
In particular, there is an asymmetry in the star counts above and below the Galactic plane,
and that asymmetry shifts with distance from the Galactic center.
This result is introduced in Section 2, where we show that if one subtracts a Hess
diagram of the stellar population south of the Galactic plane from a similar Hess diagram of
the stellar population at the same angle above the Galactic plane, a pattern of alternating
black and white stripes is produced. Each stripe is aligned in the direction expected for main
sequence stars. Where the stripes are white, there is an overdensity of main sequence stars
in the north, and where they are black there is an overdensity of main sequence stars in the
south. The alternating overdensities with apparent magnitude suggest that the asymmetry
alternates with distance from us. We name the new overdensities the “north near structure,”
and the “south middle structure.” Two other overdensities are identified with previously
named structures: “Monoceros” in the north and “TriAnd” in the south.
Sections 3, 4, and 5 describe the metallicity, spatial extent, and velocity distribution of
the stars in the north near and south middle structures. We conclude that the stars in these
structures are consistent with our expectations for thin and thick disk stars, even though
their spatial distribution of the stars is asymmetric.
In Section 6, we experiment with an oscillating vertical perturbation of a double expo-
nential model to see if we can match the observed density distribution of stars. The best
axisymmetric solution we found perturbs the Galactic plane up by 70 pc at 10.5 kpc from
the Galactic center and 170 pc down at 14 kpc from the Galactic center in a somewhat
sinusoidal pattern. To fit the star counts, though, we would need to use a model that is not
6. – 6 –
axisymmetric.
In section 7, we compare the shape and positions of the overdensities with the shapes
and positions of the Milky Way spiral arms, and find a rough agreement. One surprise is
that the spiral arms, which trace Galactic structure much closer to the Galactic plane than
our stellar tracers, seem to show vertical asymmetry in the opposite sense to the asymmetry
we observe; at Galactocentric distances where we see more stars in the north, tracers of the
spiral structure are seen with greater frequency in the south, and vice versa. We suggest this
could be consistent if there are simultaneously radial waves (as we observe in this paper)
and vertical waves (as found by previous authors). Finally, in section 8 we attempt to fit our
observations that suggest radial waves in the disk to previous observational evidence from
the Monoceros and TriAnd Rings.
2. The North-South Asymmetry of the Disk
We select photometric data from SDSS DR8 (Aihara et al. 2011) in the region 110◦
<
l < 230◦
and 10◦
< |b| < 30◦
. Within this region there are seven 2.5◦
-wide, constant longitude
stripes that extend through the low Galactic latitude region (l = 110◦
, 130◦
, 150◦
, 178◦
, 187◦
,
203◦
, and 229◦
). The locations of the SDSS stripes are shown in Figure 1. Latitudes lower
than |b| < 10◦
are excluded due to poor photometry and high dust extinction in these
crowded fields. We divide the data along these stripes into bins of 2.5◦
in latitude. Because
the low latitude SDSS photometry follows constant longitude, we can select sky areas that
are exactly symmetric around the Galactic plane.
The SDSS magnitudes were corrected for extinction according to Schlafly and Finkbeiner
(2011). This was done by first extracting the extinction from the SDSS database; the
SDSS extinction is calculated from: Au = 5.155E(B − V ), Ag = 3.793E(B − V ), Ar =
2.751E(B−V ), Ai = 2.086E(B−V ) and Az = 1.479E(B−V ) (Stoughton et al. 2002), where
the E(B−V ) reddening values are from Schlegel et al. (1998). We then adjusted the values so
that they were instead A′
u = 4.239E(B−V ), A′
g = 3.303E(B−V ), A′
r = 2.285E(B−V ), A′
i =
1.698E(B − V ) and A′
z = 1.263E(B − V ) (Schlafly and Finkbeiner 2011, using RV = 3.1).
These modified extinction values were subtracted from the measured apparent magnitudes
to determine the extinction-corrected magnitudes, denoted with subscript 0.
Table 1 gives the average E(B-V) values for each patch. From Table 1, we can see that
extinction is very uneven. High extinction (E(B − V ) > 0.25) is found at l = 110◦
,10◦
<
b < 20◦
; l = 130◦
,10◦
< b < 17.5◦
; l = 150◦
, 10◦
< b < 15◦
; and in the southern parts of
stripes l = 178◦
, 187◦
. There are two potential problems with the extinction direction of
7. – 7 –
the low galactic latitude area. The first one is that the extinction could be overestimated
in very high reddening areas (Berry et al. 2012; Chen et al. 2014). The second one is that
bright(apparent magnitude) and low Galactic latitude stars could be embedded in the dust
plane, so the 3D extinction is smaller than the maximum cumulative value.
Neither of these effects should influence the result of comparison of the main sequence
star counts of north and south sky. Although the extinction could be overestimated or
underestimated in some lines of sight, the direction of the extinction vector in the CMD is
almost aligned with the direction of the main sequence. Incorrect reddening values will move
stars up and down on the main sequence, but the assumed distance (as measured from the
apparent magnitude at a particular color) to the stars will not change. We will discuss this
point in more detail later. As we will see, the stellar density patterns at low Galactic latitude
change little with Galactic longitude while the extinction is a strong function of Galactic
longitude. There is higher extinction in the north when l < 180◦
and higher extinction in
south when l > 180◦
. Regarding the effects of 3D extinction, we tried to plot the relation
of E(B-V) vs. distance to the Sun in a region of the sky, (l,b)=(178◦
, −15◦
), with very high
reddening. The majority of the low latitude extinction is within 1 kpc of the Sun along
this line of sight. We will show later that the nearest identified overdensity is 2 kpc from
the Sun at this latitude. In addition, the 3D extinction would have to be pathologically
consistent as a function of Galactic latitude and longitude to produce the same apparent
density substructure (as a function of distance) in every direction. In summary, the results
in this section are fairly robust to inaccuracies in the reddening correction.
For each 2.5◦
patch of each of the five stripes, we present a g0 vs. (g −r)0 Hess diagram.
Figure 2 shows the Hess diagrams for the north Galactic cap, and Figure 3 shows the Hess
diagrams for the south Galactic cap. We expect to see few stars bluer than (g − r)0 = 0.4,
since this is approximately the turnoff of the thick disk. Redder than that, we expect to see
main sequence stars smoothly distributed in distance, and therefore smoothly distributed in
apparent magnitude. At faint magnitudes we expect to see a smaller number of halo stars
with a somewhat bluer turnoff than the disk. On the very red side of the diagram, we see
primarily disk M dwarf stars. Because M dwarf stars with a variety of masses pile up at the
same (g −r)0 color, the density of stars is much higher on the red side of the main sequence.
We see in Figure 2 that near the Galactic plane the high reddening tends to smear out
the main sequence stars, and completely obscure the fainter blue stars. As we move away
from the Galactic plane we see that the disk stars are more concentrated in distance (and
therefore apparent magnitude) than we expect. All but a few very low latitude panels and
other directions of high extinction show a narrow main sequence with a blue turnoff near
g0 ∼ 19.5. This is consistent with the properties of the Monoceros Ring. There is also a
8. – 8 –
second, possibly broader main sequence with a turnoff near g0 ∼ 16.5. We will refer to this
brighter apparent overdensity as the “north near structure.” The turnoff color of the north
near structure is significantly redder than that of Monoceros for b > 20◦
. Above b = 20◦
,
this pattern can be seen at all longitudes.
In the south (Figure 3), one sees a very broad distribution of stars, with a turnoff in
the vicinity of g0 = 18 (half way between the two sequences in the north) and with a turnoff
color similar to the nearer northern stars. In some locations, the Hess diagrams give the
impression of more than one main sequence feature extending from the turnoff, e.g. in plate
(178◦
, −27.5◦
). In many of the panels (particularly those further from the Galactic plane),
there is a narrow main sequence with a bluer turnoff that is a little fainter than Monoceros
in the north - maybe g0 ∼ 20. In particular, this fainter main sequence is apparent in all
of the panels with b > 22.5◦
. We will later associate this fainter main sequence with the
TriAnd Ring. It is likely that the extinction in the low latitude fields makes it impossible
to see the fainter structure in many of the southern fields, even though it might extend to
lower latitudes.
The difference between the star counts in the north and the south can be seen in dramatic
fashion by subtracting the panels in Figure 3 from the corresponding panel in Figure 2. In
addition to the six panels with l = 229◦
for which there is no data, there are three southern
panels in Figure 3 for which some data is missing. SDSS covers only 83.85% of the patch
at (l, b) = (130◦
, −22.5◦
), only 22.03% of the patch at (178◦
, −25◦
), and only 62.86% of
the patch at (178◦
, −27.5◦
). The counts in these three panels was divided by the fraction
observed before subtracting to create Figure 4; the noise in the star counts in these panels
is correspondingly larger.
If the Galactic disk is symmetric around the Galactic plane, the difference panels should
be nearly zero. Because the Sun is about 27 pc (about a tenth the scale height of the thin
disk) above the midplane, we would expect a very small asymmetry, in the sense that there
should be slightly fewer stars in the north. The closest stars in our sample are about 1.5
kpc from the Sun, and the lowest latitude of these are about one thin disk scale height
from the plane. Since the Sun’s height above the plane is about 10% of the disk scale
height, the expected north-south asymmetry in thin disk star counts is at most 20% (since
e−0.9
/e−1.1
= 1.2). The asymmetry in the thick disk star counts should be much smaller,
since the Sun’s height above the plane is less than 4% of the thick disk scale height. The
asymmetry should decrease monotonically with distance, as the observed stars are farther
and farther from the Galactic plane.
In contrast, the difference plots in Figure 4 show that there is a large north-south
asymmetry in the star counts in the Milky Way, and the sign of the asymmetry changes as a
9. – 9 –
function of distance. There are white-black-white main sequence patterns in each panel, with
the exception of a few panels at (110◦
, 10◦
), (130◦
, 10◦
), (150◦
, 10◦
), and (229◦
, 10◦
), where the
Hess diagram is smeared out by serious extinction. White means that there are more stars
on north side; black means that there are more stars on the south side. By comparison with
Figure 2 and Figure 3, the brightest white feature corresponds to north near structure. The
middle black feature corresponds to the south middle structure. The faintest white feature
corresponds to Monoceros Ring.
Figure 5 shows an expanded view of the difference Hess diagram for (l, b) = (178◦
, ±15◦
),
which represents the Galactic longitude closest to the anticenter, at the lowest latitude that
does not suffer enormous extinction. For this example difference diagram, we also show
a numerical representation of the 0.4 < (g − r)0 < 0.5 star counts in the north, south,
and subtracted diagrams for this portion of the sky. The direction of the reddening vector,
as calculated from Schlafly and Finkbeiner (2011) is indicated by the arrow. The data is
undoubtedly affected by inaccuracies in the correction for dust as a function of position in the
sky, in part due to the 3D nature of the dust. An estimate for the color and magnitude errors
associated with reddening can be obtained from the equations for the extinction due to dust:
Ag = 1.068∗Rv ∗E(B −V ), Ar = 0.737∗Rv ∗E(B −V ) and A(g−r) = 0.331∗Rv ∗E(B −V ).
The precision of Rv (estimated to be about 3.1) is 0.1-0.2 (Berry et al. 2012), and the error
in determining the extinction is about 20% in high extinction areas. The error in E(B-V)
dominates the errors in extinction correction, resulting in extinction corrections that are
uncertain by about 20%. Since the E(B-V) at (l, b) = (178◦
, 15◦
) is 0.114, we estimate
δAg = 0.08, δAr = 0.05, and δA(g−r) = 0.02. At (l, b) = (178◦
, −15◦
), E(B − V ) is 0.456. In
this region, δAg = 0.3, δAr = 0.2, and δA(g−r) = 0.09. However, the observed asymmetries
cannot be erased by adjusting the reddening values because moving stars along the reddening
direction in each panel of Figure 4 will not make the apparent banding go away. Inaccuracies
in the reddening correction cannot cause the apparent asymmetry.
Notice in the lower panel of Figure 5 that the subtracted counts are not a small fraction
of the star counts in this panel. The apparent magnitudes of the peaks differ by a full
magnitude. Alternatively, one could describe the difference in star counts; at some apparent
magnitudes the number of stars differs by a factor of two. This large difference in the star
counts for sky regions located at the same Galactic longitude and the same distance from the
Galactic plane shows quite clearly that the disk is not symmetric about the Galactic plane.
Although there could be radial or vertical age or metallicity gradients in the disk, these
would have to be quite contrived (and asymmetric) to account for the strong asymmetry
that we observe.
We will briefly consider our observed density structure in the context of the known
10. – 10 –
Galactic warp or flare. The maximum warp of M giants (Momany et al. 2006) appears at
l = 120◦
in northern sky and l = 240◦
in the southern sky at both distances 3 kpc and 7
kpc. But in this paper, both the north near structure and south middle structure extend
from l = 130◦
to 229◦
without switching sides of the Galactic plane. The warp might
explain an azimuthal dependence to the observed stellar density, but does not explain an
asymmetry that changes with distance and is evident at all Galactic longitudes. Regarding
the possibility of a disk flaring, Kalberla et al. (2014) review the flaring of stars in different
sky surveys. The scale height of the disk appears to increase with the distance from the
Galactic center. The flare of the thin disk and thick disk show different characteristics, but
there is no evidence given for whether the flare is asymmetric above and below the midplane.
We discuss possible connections with spiral arms in section 7.
3. Metallicities of the structures
Figure 6 shows the locations of SDSS stellar spectra in the region around the Galactic
anticenter. The red crosses show the centers of the plates observed in the stripes with
l = 110◦
, 130◦
, 150◦
, 178◦
, 187◦
, 203◦
, and 229◦
. There are 26 plates selected in the north and
20 plates selected in the south. This selection of plates will be used in this section to explore
the stellar populations of the overdensities, and will also be used later to explore the velocity
substructure.
Figure 7 shows how spectra were selected to coincide with the north near and south mid-
dle structures. The top panel shows a sample Hess diagram of stars in the north Galactic cap,
and the lower panel shows the corresponding panel in the south Galactic cap. Polynomials
were fit to the ridgelines of the north near structure and the south middle structure. The red
line in the upper panel of Figure 7 represents the ridgeline of the north near structure, and
the green line of the lower panel represents ridgeline of the south middle structure. Spectra
around the ridgelines (within the dashed lines) were analyzed to determine the properties of
each structure. Control samples are selected at the same position in the Hess diagram from
the sky area mirror reflected across the Galactic plane. For instance, the spectra around the
red line in the lower panel are selected as the control sample for the north near structure.
The spectra around the green line in the upper panel are selected as the control sample for
the south middle structure.
In the top panel of this figure, notice that the majority of the points on the north near
ridgeline are green, indicating metallicities close to [Fe/H]= −0.4, which is representative
of the upper part of the thin disk. The brighter (closer) stars are typically more metal-rich
and fainter (further) stars are more metal-poor. This is the expected trend; more distant
11. – 11 –
stars in this sample are not only farther from the Galactic center but also further above the
plane of the Galaxy, and are expected to have lower metallicity. The same trend is observed
in the southern field. However, there is a different distribution of stars with distance; in the
south there are many more stars just below the red curves, with metallicities closer to -0.7.
The SDSS selection criteria determining for which stars spectra were obtained is also very
different between these northern and southern fields.
The distribution of metallicities in the north near structure is shown quantitatively in
Figure 8. The panels show histograms of metallicity for six different Galactic longitudes; all
of the panels are near b = 15◦
. We expect metallicities of [Fe/H]> −0.6 for thin disk stars,
−1.2 <[Fe/H]< −0.6 for thick disk stars, and [Fe/H]< −1.2 for halo stars (Li et al. 2012).
These panels show that the majority of the spectra at each longitude have the expected
metallicities for thin disk stars. Figure 9 shows histogram of stars at similar locations below
the Galactic plane. The metallicities above and below the plane are very similar, despite the
fact that the stellar densities are very different.
Figure 10 shows that for stars in the south middle structure, the metallicity varies as a
function of Galactic latitude. Unfortunately, there are many fewer SDSS stellar spectra in
the southern Galactic hemisphere, and we show here all of the directions for which we have
a significant number of spectra in this fainter region of the Hess diagram in the south. Stars
in the south middle structure are about 6 kpc from the Sun, so at |b| = 30◦
, they are 3.0 kpc
from the Galactic plane, where as at |b| = 15◦
, they are 1.6 kpc above the plane. At Galactic
latitudes more than 15◦
from the plane, the stars look like thick disk stars with [Fe/H]∼ −0.8
dex, while closer to the plane the metallicity is about −0.6 dex. This metallicity difference
as a function of Galactic latitude is not apparent for the north near structure because, as
we shall see in Section 4, the distance to the north near structure as calculated from the
ridgeline changes with latitude so that this structure is identified at approximately the same
height above the disk at all Galactic latitudes.
There are very few SDSS spectra of stars in the farther (Monoceros and TriAnd) struc-
tures, but the metallicities of stars in these structures are measured from previous papers
describing the Monoceros Ring and the Triangulum-Andromeda Stream. The Monoceros ring
has a metallicity of [Fe/H]∼ −1 (Li et al. 2012). M giants in the Triangulum-Andromeda
overdensity have a metallicity of [Fe/H]∼ −0.6 (Sheffield et al. 2014). However, Deason et al.
(2014) measure metallicities of giant and A-type stars at more like [Fe/H]∼ −0.8 (see Fig-
ure 8 of that paper), and fit an isochrone with [Fe/H]∼ −1.5 to the TriAnd photometry.
Possibly, the M giant stars in TriAnd are preferentially more metal rich than other stellar
populations.
12. – 12 –
4. Distances to low latitude stellar rings
In Figures 2, 3, and 4 we established that at least in the Galactic longitude range
110◦
< l < 230◦
, there is an asymmetry in the number of stars, that oscillates as a function
of Galactocentric radius from more stars to the north of the plane, then more stars to the
south of the plane, then more stars to the north of the plane (this last corresponding to
the location of the Monoceros Ring). The two main sequences in the north appear to be
narrower than the one in the south. There appears to be another narrow main sequence in
the south that is slightly farther away than the Monoceros Ring, that is seen at Galactic
latitudes further from the plane where there is less extinction (see faint, blue portions of
lower panels in Figure 3).
We note that the apparent magnitude difference between the two northern main se-
quences in Figure 4 changes as a function of Galactic latitude. The more distant Monoceros
Ring remains at about the same apparent magnitude regardless of the Galactic latitude,
while the nearer apparent structure is fainter (implying more distant) at lower Galactic lat-
itudes. In fact, the implied distance above the plane for the north near structure remains
constant as a function of Galactic latitude. The apparent variation of the distance to the
“north near” structure makes it more difficult to interpret this structure as a physical ring
of stars at a particular Galactocentric distance.
When observing the star counts from within a disk with an exponential density profile,
the number of stars of a given type in a given solid angle of sky first increases with distance as
the volume increases, and then decreases since the density of the disk decreases exponentially
with distance from the Galactic plane. If the apparent “north near” main sequence is due
to the tradeoff between volume surveyed and density decline, then it is reasonable that the
apparent distance of the main sequence would increase at lower latitudes since the volume
sampled at low latitude remains closer to the Galactic plane. In fact, for a plane-parallel
disk with a density that falls off exponentially with distance from the plane, as viewed from
a point on the plane, the distance to the density maximum in a particular solid angle is
exactly inversely proportional to the sine of the Galactic latitude. Therefore, the north near
structure gives the appearance of a stellar population that stretches over many kiloparsecs
along our line of sight, and falls off exponentially as a function of distance from the Galactic
plane. The important thing to remember about the north near structure, though, is that
there are more stars in the north than in the south a couple of kiloparsecs further from the
Galactic center than the Sun.
The apparent oscillatory pattern in Figure 4 suggests that the position of the midplane
of the disk might change as a function of distance. To test whether the oscillatory pattern is
centered on the Galactic center, we use isochrone fitting to determine the distance to each
13. – 13 –
of the main sequences found in Figures 2 and 3, at the five latitude ranges 12.5◦
< |b| < 15◦
,
15◦
< |b| < 17.5◦
, 17.5◦
< |b| < 20◦
, 25◦
< |b| < 27.5◦
, and 27.5◦
< |b| < 30◦
.
The fact that the metallicity is different for each of the structures means that the
determination of the distance to each structure requires a different isochrone (and for the
south middle structure, the stellar population additionally varies with angle below the plane).
Additionally, the nature of the observed structures that we are attempting to fit is different
enough that we elected to use a different procedure to fit each one.
All of the isochrones that were fit to the substructures were taken from An et al. (2009).
In this paper, ugriz isochrones were generated from the Yale Rotating Evolutionary Code
(Sills et al. 2000, Delahaye & Pinsonneault 2006), using MARCS (Gustafsson et al. 2008)
model atmospheres. These model atmospheres are compared with fiducial sequences fit
to open clusters and globular clusters observed with the SDSS and corrected for reddening
using values from Kraft & Ivans (2003). They then make empirical corrections to the (g−r)0
vs. Teff relationship so that the theoretical isochones matched the fiducial main sequences
observed in star clusters. We checked these isochrones against those of Girardi et al. (2004)
and find that they are in good agreement for main sequence stars wit (g − r) < 0.8, so our
distances are apparently not very model dependent.
To fit an isochrone to the near north structure, stars in each 2.5◦
by 2.5◦
patch of sky
were divided into samples with a 0.1 magnitude wide range of (g−r)0 color. A histogram of g0
magnitude was generated for each of these samples, and the maximum of the histogram was
selected by eye. Then the central color and magnitude of each histogram peak was plotted
on a color-magnitude diagram; for example, see the upper black plus signs in the top panel of
Figure 11. The distance to an 8 Gyr isochrone with [Fe/H]=-0.5 was then varied so that the
closest fit to the plus signs was achieved. Because the internal color and absolute magnitude
of the bluest point of the turnoff of the 8 Gyr isochrone is ((g − r)0, g0) = (0.316, 4.11),
the absolute magnitude (Mg0 ) of the stars with (g − r)0 < 0.316 was assumed to be 4.11.
With this assumption, we could fit stars even if they were bluer than the turnoff. At a fixed
metallicity, the main sequence of isochrones will be the same between 0.3 < (g − r) < 1.2
for different ages, so the age of the isochrone is not important for fitting the main sequence.
The apparent positions of the near north structure, projected onto the Galactic plane, are
shown in the top panel Figure 12.
Without an actual substructure with a significantly different density from the surround-
ings, the peak distance of the star counts will depend on the rate at which the density declines
along a particular line of sight and the increase in the volume of a sphere with distance. If
the region of the Galaxy probed is small compared to the scale length of the disk and in the
absence of significant reddening variations, the peak of the star counts distribution will be
14. – 14 –
the same distance from the Sun at all Galactic longitudes and depend strongly on Galactic
latitude. The north near structure shows peaks in the distribution that depend on Galactic
latitude and are roughly concentric around the position of the Sun. In particular, they are
further than 10 kpc from the Galactic center at l = 180◦
, and closer than 10 kpc at both
higher and lower Galactic longitudes; the higher latitude distances are particularly concen-
tric around the Sun and do not follow circles centered on the Galactic center (see Figure 12).
It is not clear that the north near structure represents a ring; however, it is still true that
near the Sun there appear to be more stars above the plane than below the plane, so there
must be some local structure near this position.
We had particular difficulty fitting an isochrone to the south middle structure, since the
stars appeared to be very spread out in distance. At the faint end, the turnoff is often slightly
bluer than the bright end, and sometimes there is the appearance of more than one main
sequence. In the end, we decided to fit the center of the larger substructure, and disregard
the individual smaller features. We selected all of the stars bluer than (g − r)0 < 0.4 in
each patch of sky. We then created histograms in g0. We then selected the peak of the
distribution, and calculated the distance to the south middle structure by comparing that
distribution peak with the turnoff of an interpolated isochrone from An et al. (2009). We
used the set of isochrones with ages of 12.5 Gyr. Although this age seems old for the
disk, younger isochrones were not a reasonable fit to the turnoff color of the south middle
structure. We generated an interpolated isochrone with the measured metallicity at different
Galactic latitudes. For stars with |b| < 15◦
, we created an isochrone with [Fe/H]= −0.44
and turnoff absolute magnitude Mg0 (TO) = 5.06. The color of the interpolated isochrone
turnoff is (g − r)0(TO) = 0.403. For stars with 15◦
< |b| < 20◦
, we created an isochrone for
[Fe/H]= −0.61, Mg0 (TO) = 4.87, and (g − r)0(TO) = 0.384. For stars with 20◦
< |b| < 25◦
,
we created an isochrone for [Fe/H]= −0.73, Mg0 (TO) = 4.75, and (g − r)0(TO) = 0.360.
For stars with 25◦
< |b| < 30◦
, we created an isochrone for [Fe/H]= −0.88, Mg0 (TO) = 4.58,
and (g − r)0(TO) = 0.328. The apparent positions of the south middle structure, calculated
as described above and projected onto the Galactic plane, are shown by plus signs in the
lower panel of Figure 11.
As is apparent from Figure 12, the brown and black plus signs in the south middle
structure, which are at the larger angles from the Galactic plane, form concentric circles
around the Sun’s position and not around the Galactic center. The latitudes closer to the
Galactic plane are ambiguous as to whether they are concentric around the Sun or the
Galactic center; they are somewhat in between.
We also tried a second method for determining the distance to the south middle struc-
ture. For a range of 0.1 magnitude wide (g − r)0 color bins, we plotted a histogram of
15. – 15 –
the number counts as a function of g0 magnitude in a low Galactic latitude (|b|) field, and
then subtracted a histogram of the number counts as a function of g0 magnitude for the
−30◦
< b < −27.5◦
field at the same Galactic latitude. This was a logical thing to try,
since the high (|b|) latitude field did not seem to contain the excess population, so the dif-
ference might be more indicative of the excess. The distance to the peak of the difference
of the histograms is plotted as diamonds in Figure 12. These distances are about 300 to
500 pc further than the distances derived by the previous method, when similar sky posi-
tions are compared. They also appear to be roughly Galactocentric, but with slightly larger
Galactocentric distances at larger Galactic longitudes.
The more distant structures in both the north and the south were fit in a similar
fashion to each other. We used the An et al. fiducial sequence for the globular cluster M5
([Fe/H]∼ −1.2 dex). We made histograms of (g − r)0 at constant g0, which cuts through
the H-R diagram in the opposite direction from what was used in measuring the near north
structure. We preferred to cut through the diagram horizontally so that we did not use the
fainter, noisier data to determine the center of the main sequences. Figure 11 shows the
positions of the centers of the main sequence measured for each 0.1 magnitude wide range
of g0 for a sample region of sky. The apparent positions of the distant northern structure,
projected onto the Galactic plane, are shown in the upper panel of Figure 12; and the
positions of the distant southern structure, projected onto the Galactic plane, are shown in
the lower panel of Figure 12.
Figure 12 shows that the further structures (associated with the Monoceros Ring and the
Triangulum Andromeda Stream) form approximately concentric rings around the Galactic
center (taken to be 8 kpc from the Sun). The south middle, far north, and far south structures
all seem to be a little closer to the Galactic center in the second quadrant than they are in
the third quadrant.
5. Velocity Substructure of North Near and South Middle Structure
In the previous section, we identified three or four ring-like features near the plane of the
Milky Way. The Monoceros Ring and Triangulum-Andromeda Stream have been studied for
more than a decade without agreement on the nature of these objects, which could be tidal
debris or a warp/flare/oscillation of the outer disk (see the introduction for discussion and
references). Here, we inquire as to the nature of the nearer substructures. We will further
discuss the nature of all four structures in sections 7 & 8. We first compare the velocity
distribution to a simple disk model in which the thick disk lags the thin disk by 50 km s−
1,
and then compare only the stars with disk metallicities with a better model that includes
16. – 16 –
asymmetric drift but does not apply to a portion of our data that is too far from the Galactic
plane.
In Figure 13 we present velocity histograms of the stars in the north near structure at
six different Galactic longitudes; all of the panels are near b = 15◦
and are the same stars for
which we presented metallicity histograms in Figure 8. The line-of-sight, Galactic standard
of rest velocity, Vgsr, for a particular star is calculated with: Vgsr = Vhelio + 13.84 cos b cos l +
250 cos b sin l + 6 sin b (Sch¨onrich 2012). To compute the expected velocity distribution of
stars in each panel, we use the average distance to the stars in the field along with the (l, b)
coordinates of the center of the field to determine the position of these stars in the Milky
Way. The distance to each individual star was determined from the apparent magnitude of
the star and the absolute magnitude of stars with the same color in the isochrone that was
fit to the near north structure. Then, we compute the expected Vgsr for the thin disk and
thick disk at that location. The thin disk stars are assumed to have a Gaussian velocity
distribution with dispersion σ = 25 km s−1
centered around the circular speed 238 km s−1
(Sch¨onrich 2012; McMillan 2011). We adopt a thick disk velocity that lags the thin disk
by 50 km s−1
(Soubiran et al. 2003), and a thick disk velocity dispersion of σ = 50 km s−1
.
The velocity dispersions of the disk components are also taken from Soubiran et al. (2003),
and although they are measured at the solar position, they are assumed to be approximately
correct even 1 kpc above the Galactic plane and 2 kpc from the Sun. The halo stars are
assumed to have zero mean velocity, with a sigma of 100 km s−1
around the mean (Li et al.
2012).
Given the position of the stars and the mean velocity of each Galactic component at
that position, we then calculate the component of the velocity along our line of sight for the
thin and thick disks (the mean velocity of the halo is always zero). The number of stars
assigned to each component was determined from the number of stars in each of the three
metallicity ranges in Figure 8. In Figure 13, the red curve is the theoretical Vgsr distribution
of the thin disk, the blue curve is the theoretical Vgsr distribution of the thick disk, the yellow
line is the theoretical Vgsr distribution of the halo stars, and the black curve is the sum of
the three. The dotted line shows the position of a 2.5 sigma excess in each bin, calculated
from Poisson statistics. The median line-of-sight velocity error is 4.84 km s−1
, which is much
smaller than the binsize in our histograms.
Figure 14 shows the similarly calculated velocity distribution of south middle structure.
Because it is located further than the north near structure, there are not sufficient spectra
to trace this structure in most of the regions for which we have photometry. For the six
directions with a significant number of spectra, we fit the observational Vgsr with our standard
kinematic model; the fraction of each component was derived from the fractions of stars in
17. – 17 –
each of the metallicity bins in Figure 10. The stars we observe in the south middle structure
are about 1.5 kpc above the Galactic plane, so most stars in the south middle structure
belong to the thick disk. The position of the peak velocity is consistent with expectations
for thick disk stars. However, most of the observational histograms have a smaller velocity
dispersion than the model predicts.
What we learn from these velocity histograms compared to the simple disk model is
that the north near structure is expected to be primarily thin disk stars, and the data is
roughly consistent with that; the south middle structure is expected to be a mix of thin and
thick disk stars, and the data is also roughly consistent with the model. However, there is
a systematic shift in the model and observed velocity distribution, in the sense that there
are too many low velocities observed at lower Galactic longitude in the second quadrant and
too many high velocities observed at higher Galactic longitude in the third quadrant. We
next show that this systematic shift can be explained by properly including the asymmetric
drift. We found no evidence for a group of stars with velocities and/or metallicities that
were unlike those of the Galactic disk. If we had found such a population, that would be
evidence that the star counts asymmetry might be due to satellite accretion.
Sch¨onrich & Binney (2012) derive an analytical formula that describes the fact that the
azimuthal components of the velocities of stars in a galactic disk are skew, with many more
stars lagging the disk than leading it (asymmetric drift). Equation 29 from that paper gives
the expected distribution of velocities as a function of position in the Milky Way. We used
the exact model from that paper; their model includes a thin disk with scale height 300 pc,
a thick disk with scale height 1000 pc, and a scale length of 2.5 kpc for both components.
They also use 8 kpc from the Sun to the Galactic center. We used the values in Table 3 of
Sch¨onrich & Binney (2012) to get the disk velocity dispersion (σ0), the scale length of the
velocity dispersion (Rσ), and the local scale height (h0), as a function of height above the
disk. Because this table only reaches to 2 kpc above the disk, we cannot apply it to the
higher latitude data in the south middle structure.
The output of the Sch¨onrich & Binney (2012) model is a histogram of Vφ with a bin
size of 1 km s−1
, for the particular location being modeled. We then used a Monte Carlo
simulation to select Vφ from the resulting histogram and Vr from a Gaussian with a mean of
0 km s−1
and a sigma of 35 km s−1
. These values were then combined and converted to the
line-of-sight Vgsr. Multiple pulls from these two distributions were built up to calculate the
expected Vgsr histogram. Our value for the width of the Vr Gaussian was derived from the
width of our velocity distribution at l = 178◦
, where there should be no contribution from
the azimuthal velocity.
In Figure 15, we show the velocity distribution of the disk stars only, as determined from
18. – 18 –
the metallicity cut at [Fe/H]> −1.2 (see Figure 8). The solid red curve gives the predicted
velocity distribution from the Sch¨onrich & Binney (2012) model, and the dotted blue curve
shows the 2.5 sigma error limit for each bin. The velocity distribution including asymmetric
drift produces a much improved fit to the observed velocity distribution of disk stars.
There are a couple of single bins that are unusually high in the velocity histograms.
In particular, the Vgsr = 170 km s−1
peak at (l, b) = (110◦
, 16◦
) appears quite significant.
Possibly there is another peak and at Vgsr = 80 km s−1
at (l, b) = (150◦
, 15◦
). We suspect
that these peaks are due to the presence of disrupted star clusters, which will be further
explored in a separate publication.
The improved disk model, plus a few dissolved open clusters, is a good match to the
velocity distribution. We do not see a substantial portion of the population at a different
metallicity and/or velocity than the disk in either the near north or the south middle struc-
tures, as we would have expected if the disk asymmetry was due to satellite accretion. We
therefore conclude that the near north structure is due to a distortion of the stars in the disk
component(s) of the Milky Way.
Figure 16 shows the velocity distribution of disk stars in the south middle structure,
selected by metallicity, compared to the Sch¨onrich & Binney model. Note that only three
of the panels in Figure 10 are within |z| < 2 and therefore accessible to the Sch¨onrich &
Binney model. Although there are fewer stars, and therefore fewer velocities, available for
the south middle structure, we have the sense that the situation is similar; the metallicities
and velocities do not show a deviation from expectations for the thin and thick disk, and
the velocity distribution is as expected if one includes the effects of asymmetric drift. We
therefore conclude that the south middle structure is also likely due to a distortion of the
stars in the disk component(s) of the Milky Way.
The two more distant structures, which we will call the Monoceros and TriAnd Rings,
could also be disk structures. The disk oscillation might explain why the disk appeared
to suddenly end at 15 kpc from the Galactic center in previous studies. Alternatively, the
Monoceros and TriAnd Rings could be due to one or more accretion events (or more likely
the accretion of a group of substructures), which would explain why there are so many
stream-like substructures observed in SDSS and Pan-STARRS1 data.
6. Fitting a Model Disk to the Star Counts
We now attempt to fit a simple model to the star counts in the near north and south
middle structures. We select early K-type stars by color (0.6 < (g − r)0 < 0.7) from
19. – 19 –
SDSS DR8 and fit a disk density profile to the observed star counts. The vast majority
of these stars are main sequence stars, that are assumed to have an absolute magnitude of
Mg0 = 6.776. This absolute magnitude was determined from interpolation of the isochrone
that was used to fit the north near structure for the color (g−r)0 = 0.65. For comparison, the
isochrones that were used to fit the south middle structure have absolute magnitude Mg0 =
(6.723, 6.829, 6.911, 7.051) for metallicites [Fe/H]=(−0.44, −0.61, −0.73, −0.88), respectively.
The absolute magnitude of the isochrone fit to the Monoceros and TriAnd Rings has an
absolute magnitude of Mg0 = 7.272 at (g − r)0 = 0.65. The use of the wrong absolute
magnitude (for example using Mg0 = 6.776 instead of Mg0 = 7.272, the difference between
absolute magnitudes of the K stars from the outermost and innermost rings, and nearly the
largest difference of the isochrones listed) for these outer rings could have introduced a 26%
distance error; since we are not fitting the structures out that far this was not a problem.
The distances derived from this model for the south middle structure are likely too large
by about 4% because we did not vary the absolute magnitude of our tracers with stellar
population.
We expect that lower Galactic latitudes, where both the star counts and the gradient
in the star counts are higher, are more sensitive to the disk structure; therefore we use only
directions with 10◦
< |b| < 20◦
. At low latitudes, though, the larger extinction makes it
impossible to detect the fainter stars in TriAnd and Monoceros Rings. Even when these
rings are visible, the completeness of the star counts is low. Therefore, we only attempt to
fit the disk star counts model to the near north and south middle structures. We excluded
some regions of the sky in fitting the model due to large reddening.
In Figure 17, we present histograms of the color-selected K-type star counts for each of
our 2.5◦
by 2.5◦
sky patches. We then compare the observed star counts with expectations
from a very simple Galactic structure model with two exponential disks: a thin disk and
a thick disk, and a cored, power law spheroid. Note that the initial mass function of the
stellar populations is not important here, since we are selecting only a small color range of
primarily main sequence stars, which can be thought of as a single tracer population.
The number of stars expected in a given distance range, R1 < R < R2, is given by:
A =
R2
R1
ρ(R(r, z))R2
dRdΩ,
where R is the distance from the Sun, and (r,z) are Galactocentric cylindrical coordinates,
and ρ is the stellar density. The integral was performed numerically in the software package
IDL, for each sky position and distance range. The sky area dΩ is the size of the patch of sky
observed; the integral is only over the distance range of the stars in the bin. The expected
number of stars was calculated for eight bins in the range 16.5 < g0 < 20.5, that are each
20. – 20 –
half a magnitude wide. Given Mg0 = 6.776, the distance range covered within the magnitude
range is about 0.8 kpc to 5.6 kpc. In this magnitude range, we are fitting only the north near
structure and the south middle structure. Since these stars are selected in a narrow range
of color, the errors in color near the limits of the survey will result in sampling a different
population (Newby et al. 2011), so it is not advisable to fit the more distant Monoceros and
TriAnd Rings.
The parameters for the thin and thick disk were chosen from the ranges presented by
Chen et al. (2001). Because the star counts are sensitive to the scale height of the disk and
the fraction of the stars in the thick disk, the numbers we use were chosen from the range
given in Chen et al. (2001), but were fit with a process that will be explained in detail later
in this section. The Sun’s height above the Galactic plane, z0, is 27 pc. The scale height, hd,
and scale length, ld of the thin disk are 250 pc and 2250 pc, respectively. The scale height,
htd, and scale length, ltd of the thick disk are 700 pc and 3500 pc, respectively. The local
fraction of thick disk stars in the local volume is 8% and the local fraction of halo stars is
0.125%. The thin disk and thick disk densities are given by:
ρd(r, z) ∝ e(−r/hd)
e(−|z|/hd)
,
ρtd(r, z) ∝ e(−r/htd)
e(−|z|/htd)
.
Here, (r, z) are Galactocentric cylindrical coordinates, with z in the direction of the north
Galactic pole.
The spheroid density function was adapted from Reid (1993), but we use a flattening of
q = 0.8 from, for example, Robin (1986). The spheroid function is:
ρs(d(r, z)) ∝
1
an
0 + dn
,
where d = r2 + (z/q)2, n = 3.5, and a0 = 1000 pc.
The total density is therefore:
ρ = ρ0(0.91875ρd + 0.08ρtd + 0.00125ρs),
where ρ0 is the density of G-type stars at the solar position. This number was adjusted
so that the total number of stars in all of the panels in Figure 17 with model lines shown
with solid lines, equaled the total area under the model curves in the same figure. For
this normalization, both north and south panels were included in the calculation of a single
overall normalization. A summary of the model parameters is given in the top section of
Table 2.
21. – 21 –
A comparison of the star counts to our simple model is shown in Figure 17. The panels in
which the model is shown as a dotted line are the panels that were not fit in the optimization
of the model due to concern over high extinction. Note that not a single panel portrays a
good fit between the model and the observed shape of the apparent magnitude distribution.
Looking particularly at l = 203◦
, one sees that the peak in magnitude counts is closer to us
than in the model for the northern fields, and farther than our model for the southern fields.
Because we have already shown that the star counts are not symmetric above and below
the Galactic plane, it is not surprising that the simple, symmetric model is a poor match to
the data. Thus we attempt a simple modification to the density model as a demonstration of
the kind of structure that would be required to fit the star counts we observe. We modified
the thin and thick disks so that the highest density (which was originally in the Galactic
plane at z = 0) oscillates up and down. It was not sufficient to put in a simple sinusoidal
oscillation. To mimic the data we put in the positive half of a sine wave with a particular
wavelength, amplitude and offset to model the north near structure. We then put in the
negative half of a sine wave, with an offset so that it started at zero where the sine wave
for the north near structure went to zero, with a larger wavelength and amplitude to model
the south middle structure. This model is completely ad hoc, but does illustrate the type of
modification that is necessary to fit the data.
Figure 18 shows the geometry of the wave we have added to the disk to attempt to
match the star counts. The density functions of the disks are modified to be:
ρd(r, z) ∝ e(−r/hd)
e(−|z−zw|/hd)
,
ρtd(r, z) ∝ e(−r/htd)
e(−|z−zw|/htd)
,
where
zw = Aw sin(2π(r − φw)/λw),
Aw is the amplitude of the oscillation. The subscript “w” indicates that the parameter is
related to the wave that we are introducing. r is the Galactocentric cylindrical radius, φw
is the offset of the oscillation from the Galactic center, and λw is the wavelength of the
oscillation. We use a different wavelength and offset for the part of the wave near the north
near structure and for the part of the wave near the south middle structure. The wavelength
and offset of the north near structure have subscript “n” and the wavelength and offset of
the south middle structure have subscript “s”. These four quantities can be derived from
the three parameters rs, λs, and λn from the equations:
rs = rs,
φs = rs − int
rs − 3
4
λs
λs
λs −
3
4
λs,
22. – 22 –
rn = rs −
1
4
λs −
1
4
λn,
φn = rn − int
rn − 1
4
λn
λn
λn −
1
4
λs.
Here, “int” refers to the integer part of the quantity in brackets; this term assures that the
offset will be less than one wavelength. In the region where r < rn + λn/4, we use Aw = An,
φw = φn, λw = λn. In the region where r < rn + λn/4, we use Aw = As, φw = φs, λw = λs.
We now optimize the parameters in the model to best match the data. The parameters
that we fixed are five parameters for the oscillation: An, As, λn, λs, and rs; and two pa-
rameters for the disk: hd, and the local fraction of thick disk stars. This optimization was
accomplished using a grid search. It turns out the fit is quite sensitive to the amplitudes An
and As, so these were fit first to be 70 pc and 170 pc, respectively. The two wavelengths were
fit between 3.0 and 7.8 in steps of 0.3 kpc. The distance to the peak of the south middle
structure was fit between 11.4 and 14 kpc, in steps of 0.2 kpc. The thin disk scale height
was fit between 90 and 350 pc in steps of 50 pc, and the thick disk fraction was fit between
6.5% and 13% in steps of 1.5%.
The best fit values were λn = 6.3 kpc, λs = 7.8 kpc, rs = 14 kpc, hd = 250 pc, and the
thick disk fraction was 8%. One can calculate from these numbers that rn = 10.5 kpc. The
distance to the near north structure is similar to the near north position in Figure 12, but
the distance to the south middle structure is about 2 kpc farther away than in Figure 12.
The correction in distance from using an absolute magnitude that is brighter than we should
have for this population only makes a difference of order 0.2 kpc. The distances in Figure 12
were derived from the peak of the apparent magnitude histogram, which would make sense
if we were measuring the distance to a narrow overdensity. Instead this peak results from a
combination of changing volume with distance, exponential decline in the disk density, and
vertical oscillation of the disk midplane.
The starcounts resulting from the best fit model that includes the simple wave are shown
in Figure 19. Note that now the north near region near the anticenter is very well fit. The
rest of the panels are for the most part not better, but at least they are not worse.
One can see from the figure that the reason the model cannot be made to exactly match
the data is that the model is axisymmetric, but the data is clearly different on either side of
the Galactic anticenter. For example look at the row where b = −12.5◦
. All of the data to
the right of l = 178◦
(high Galactic longitude) has a fairly sharp peak while all of the data
to the left of l = 178◦
(low Galactic longitude) is quite rounded. While the data and the
model are a good match at l = 130◦
and l = 150◦
, the model and the data do not match at
l = 203◦
and l = 229◦
. It is clear from the southern data that there is an asymmetry around
23. – 23 –
the anticenter in the shape and position of the peak of the apparent magnitude distribution.
Since our model is axisymmetric, there was no way for the model to include this feature of
the data.
The wave amplitudes and positions we measure are reasonably similar to the simulations
of G´omez et al. (2013), which predicts disk oscillations due to infall of the Sagittarius dwarf
galaxy. Our measurements are more similar to the light (Mvir = 1010.5
M⊙) Sagittarius dwarf.
However, it is unclear whether this is the only possible explanation, or in particular whether
this is the only satellite that could be causing the observed disk oscillations.
7. Relationship of rings to spiral arms and vertical waves
Yanny & Gardner (2013) and Widrow et al. (2012) found an asymmetry in the number
of stars above and below the Galactic plane, but the sign of the asymmetry oscillates with
height above and below the disk. Closer than 0.5 kpc, there are more stars in the south; at
0.5 < |z| < 1 kpc there are more stars in the north. At 1 < |z| < 2 kpc, there are more stars
in the south again. Our near north structure is about 2 kpc from the Sun, and we probe
0.35 < |z| < 1.15 kpc, so our finding that there are more stars in the north is reasonably
consistent with their observation. If it is true that there are also density oscillations with
height, then we are possibly observing the combination of radial oscillations with vertical
oscillations. Because the vertical oscillations are apparently due to an oscillation of the disk
midplane, the observations seem more consistent with a bending mode due to satellite infall
(Widrow et al. 2014) rather than a spiral-induced perturbation (Faure et al. 2014).
One thing we noticed about Figure 12 is that the rings appear to be slightly farther from
the Galactic center in the third quadrant than they are in the second quadrant, opening in
the direction of the Milky Way’s spiral arms. We therefore asked ourselves whether these
structures could be related to spiral arms. Figure 16 of Hou & Han (2014) shows the locations
of HII regions, giant molecular clouds (GMCs), and 6.7-GHz methanol masers that are used
to trace the Milky Way’s spiral arms. This figure shows the Galactic warp; the spiral arms
in quadrants 1 and 2 are north of the plane, and quadrant three is primarily south of the
plane. We note that the Perseus arm is about two kpc from the Sun in the direction of the
anticenter; roughly at the same place as our near north structure. However, most of the
tracers are below the plane while our near north structure is denser above the plane.
Spiral arm tracers that could be related to the Outer Arm in Figure 16 of Hou & Han
(2014), in the region from 110◦
< l < 230◦
, appear to be 4-6 kpc from the Sun. This location
is similar to our south middle structure, but while the spiral arm tracers are predominantly
24. – 24 –
above the plane, our south middle structure is below the plane. We see the south middle
structure at 10◦
< |b| < 20◦
, which corresponds to −2.2 < z < −1.5 kpc, while the Outer
Arm observations are typically 0.2 to 0.4 kpc above the plane.
We are struck by the fact that previous authors have noted that in the solar neighbor-
hood the asymmetry close to the Galactic plane is in the opposite direction to the asymmetry
about one kpc above the plane. We are seeing similar behavior at other Galactocentric radii,
and that the waves may be related to the Milky Way’s spiral structure. Note, however, that
the structures could also be related to perturbations from a satellite galaxy; G´omez et al.
(2013) have shown (see Figure 6 of that paper) that the vertical perturbations from satellite
galaxies are not expected to be perfect rings, but more like spirals. It is unclear how spiral
structure in gas should be related to oscillations of stars induced by dwarf galaxy infall, but
we note here that their structures are similar.
8. The Monoceros and TriAnd Rings
The identity of the Monoceros Ring in the north is fairly straightforward and consistent
between different authors. The only ambiguity arises from how much of the substructure at
that distance is assigned to or associated with the ring and how much has been pulled out
as separate structures.
The TriAnd Ring and the southern structures have been labeled differently by different
authors and at different Galactic longitudes. In Newberg et al. (2002), the structure S200-
24-19.8, at (l, b) = (200◦
, −24◦
), was tentatively associated with the Monoceros stream in
the north (see Figure 26 of that paper), even though it was 0.4 magnitudes fainter than the
northern structure. When Ibata et al. (2003) wrote the paper identifying the “one ring to en-
compass them all,” which is their description of the Monoceros Ring, they identified structure
that we recognize as the Monoceros Ring in the north, but in their southern fields they iden-
tified stars that we call the south middle structure with the “one ring.” Rocha-Pinto et al.
(2004) originally discovered the overdensity covering the Triangulum and Andromeda con-
stellations, with 100◦
< l < 150◦
and −40◦
< b < −20◦
, and by their estimation about 30
kpc from the Galactic center. In the Rocha-Pinto paper, the nearer debris in the south,
that we are calling the south middle structure, is labeled as the Galactic Anticenter Stellar
Stream (GASS), which is their name for the Monoceros Ring. Sheffield et al. (2014) showed
that the structure studied by Rocha-Pinto et al. (2004) actually corresponds to the so-called
“TriAnd2” overdensity, identified by Martin et al. (2007) at a distance of ∼ 28 kpc. Sheffield
et al. identify the more nearby “TriAnd1” at a distance of ∼ 15 − 21 kpc. Deason et al.
(2014) independently found a heliocentric distance to the Triangulum-Andromeda overden-
25. – 25 –
sity of 20 kpc (in agreement with the Martin et al. 2007 distance to TriAnd1), which trans-
lates to 23 kpc from the Galactic center. Our calculation of just over 20 kpc from the Sun
agrees well with previous determinations of the TriAnd distance.
Our findings might suggest that the Monoceros and TriAnd Rings, along with the north
near and south middle structures, are part of the disk. These rings appear to fit into the
pattern of spiral arms and density waves. One can imagine that if the disk continues to
decline in metallicity and increase in scale height past 14 kpc from the Galactic center, our
observations would be in reasonable agreement with this finding. In this scenario, the reason
the disk appears to end at around 14 kpc is due to an oscillation in density, and the reason
it appears again in a more distant ring is also due to an oscillation. The spiral density
wave pattern, though possibly not the spiral arms themselves (which require gas and star
formation), would extend out to 20 kpc or more from the Galactic center. The fact that
stars in these structures appear to be rotating in approximately circular orbits in the same
direction as the disk would then be explained. It is also possible that the apparently narrow
line-of-sight depth of the ring structures (especially the Monoceros Ring) could be explained
by an oscillation of the disk up into our line of sight and then down out of our observation
window. The conflicting argument for these structures to be tidal features then rests on the
observation of apparent filamentary streams in these structures, that might arise from the
capture of groups of subhalos.
It remains to be determined whether: (1) the disk really extends as a single entity past
20 kpc from the Galactic center, and (2) disk oscillations, warps, flares, and spiral density
waves can produce the highly substructured overdensities that are observed in for example the
Pan-STARRS1 picture of anticenter substructure (Slater et al. 2014). A possible solution to
the controversy could be that the outer disk is built up from the accretion of small satellites,
as proposed in Abadi et al. (2003). If the individual accreted satellites have not yet fully
mixed with the others, then we could simultaneously be seeing both satellite accretion and
disk oscillations.
9. Conclusion
In this paper we show that there is an oscillation in the number counts of stars in color-
magnitude diagrams generated for patches of sky above and below the Galactic plane, in the
Galactic latitude range 110◦
< l < 229◦
. This number count oscillation corresponds to an
oscillation of the stellar density asymmetry as a function of distance from the Sun, in the
direction of the Galactic anticenter.
26. – 26 –
We identify four “substructures” that represent the locations of peaks in the oscillations
of the disk midplane, observed at about ±15◦
Galactic latitude, towards the Galactic anti-
center. Assuming a distance of 8 kpc from the Sun to the Galactic center, the North Near
structure is 10.5 kpc from the Galactic center, the South Middle structure is 12-14 kpc from
the Galactic center, the Monoceros Ring is 16.5 kpc from the Galactic center, and the TriAnd
Ring is 21 kpc from the Galactic center. The distances are determined from isochrone fits to
main sequence stars. In three of four substructures (South Middle, Monoceros, and TriAnd),
the distance from the Galactic center appears to increase slightly with Galactic longitude,
in the direction of Milky Way spiral arms. We are unable to observe a significant extent of
the North Near structure.
The Monoceros Ring has been studied by many authors, but here we associate only
the identifications north of the Galactic plane. Since the Monoceros Ring in the north is in
between the South Middle and TriAnd Ring, both of these have, at different locations and
by different authors, been previously associated with the Monoceros Ring in the north. In
this paper, we suggest that this association is incorrect. The southern structures also cover
a large range of Galactic longitudes and are on either side of the Monoceros Ring by more
than four kpc. The part of the TriAnd Ring that is in the longitude range 110◦
< l < 150◦
has previously been identified as the Triangulum Andromeda Stream.
We fit the two nearer oscillations with a toy model in which the disk plane is offset
by 70 pc up at 10.5 kpc from the Galactic center and 170 pc down at 14 kpc from the
Galactic center in a somewhat sinusoidal pattern. This model can fit the star counts in
the anticenter, but because the disk is demonstrably not symmetric around the Galactic
anticenter, this axisymmetric model is not sufficient to describe the data. More complex and
physically motivated models are needed to match the observed data.
We can tentatively connect the North Near structure with the position of the Perseus
spiral arm and the South Middle structure with the position of the Outer spiral arm. Maps
by Hou & Han (2014) suggest that the Perseus arm is more obvious below the plane, while
the North Near structure shows more stars above the plane. Likewise, the Outer arm is
more obvious above the plane while the South Middle structure shows more stars below the
plane. This can be reconciled if we also compare with Widrow et al. (2013) and Yanny &
Gardner (2014), who show that there are vertical oscillations in the stellar density in the
solar neighborhood; close to the plane the density of stars is higher in the south while at
0.5 < |z| < 1.0 kpc the density of stars is higher in the north. If similar vertical density
waves appear throughout the disk, then we can reconcile the opposite density patterns of the
Outer arm and South Middle structure as well. One imagines in this case that the vertical
and radial oscillations are connected to spiral density waves in the Galaxy.
27. – 27 –
Several recent papers have discussed the origin of the Monoceros and TriAnd Rings.
TriAnd in particular is thought to be the result of satellite accretion, while the debate of the
disk vs. satellite origin for the Monoceros Ring has lasted more than a decade. In both of
these structures, a number of smaller substructures that look like dwarf galaxies and tidal
streams have been observed. We suggest that the TriAnd and Monoceros Rings could look
like both satellite accretion and like the disk if they in fact consist of accreted satellites that
form the outer disk. If the Monoceros and TriAnd rings are in the outer disk, then the
stellar disk extends to at least 25 kpc from the Galactic center. Previous measurements of
the disk scale length and the observation of a sharp cutoff in stellar density about 15 kpc
from the Galactic center (Robin et al. 1992) should be re-examined in light of the observed
oscillations of the disk midplane.
Our results roughly resemble the radial and vertical oscillations expected from the infall
of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy (G´omez et al. 2013). As this is not the only effect that can
result in such oscillations and as other satellites may have contributions, future work with
stringent quantitative comparisons to our measurements is warranted.
10. Acknowledgments
This work is supported by NSFC grant Nos. 11203030 and the National Key Basic
Research Program of China 2014CB845703, as well as the US National Science Founda-
tion under grant AST 09-37523 and AST 14-09421. We thank the anonymous referee for
comments that led to a clearer presentation of our results. Funding for SDSS-III has been
provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Participating Institutions, the National Sci-
ence Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science. The SDSS-III web
site is http://www.sdss3.org/. SDSS-III is managed by the Astrophysical Research Consor-
tium for the Participating Institutions of the SDSS-III Collaboration including the University
of Arizona, the Brazilian Participation Group, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Carnegie
Mellon University, University of Florida, the French Participation Group, the German Par-
ticipation Group, Harvard University, the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, the Michigan
State/Notre Dame/JINA Participation Group, Johns Hopkins University, Lawrence Berke-
ley National Laboratory, Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Max Planck Institute for
Extraterrestrial Physics, New Mexico State University, New York University, Ohio State Uni-
versity, Pennsylvania State University, University of Portsmouth, Princeton University, the
Spanish Participation Group, University of Tokyo, University of Utah, Vanderbilt University,
University of Virginia, University of Washington, and Yale University.
28. – 28 –
REFERENCES
Abadi, M. G., Navarro, J. F., Steinmetz, M., & Eke, V. R. 2003, ApJ, 597, 21
Aihara, H., Allende Prieto, C., An, D., et al. 2011, ApJS, 193, 29
An, Deokkeun, Pinsonneault, Marc H., Masseron, Thomas; et al.,2009, ApJ, 700, 523
Belokurov, V., Walker, M. G., Evans, N. W., et al. 2009, MNRAS, 397, 1748
Berry, M., Ivezi´c, ˇZ., Sesar, B., et al. 2012, ApJ, 757, 166
Bonaca, Ana, Geha, Marla, Kallivayalil, Nitya , 2012, ApJ, 760, 6
Carlin, J. L., DeLaunay, J., Newberg, H. J., et al. 2013, ApJ, 777, L5
Chen, B., Stoughton, C., Smith, J. A., et al. 2001, ApJ, 553, 184
Chen, B. Q., Liu, X. W., Yuan, H. B., et al. 2014, MNRAS, 443, 1192
Chou, M.-Y., Majewski, S. R., Cunha, K., et al. 2011, ApJ, 731, L30
Conn, B. C., No¨el, N. E. D., Rix, H.-W., et al. 2012, ApJ, 754, 101
Crane, J. D., Majewski, S. R., Rocha-Pinto, H. J., et al. 2003, ApJ, 594, L119
Cui, X.-Q., Zhao, Y.-H., Chu, Y.-Q., et al. 2012, Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics,
12, 1197
Deason, A. J., Belokurov, V., Hamren, K. M., et al. 2014, MNRAS, 444, 3975
Deng, L.-C., Newberg, H. J., Liu, C., et al. 2012, Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics,
12, 735
Faure, C., Siebert, A., & Famaey, B. 2014, MNRAS, 440, 2564
Gilbert, K. M., Guhathakurta, P., Beaton, R. L., et al., 2012, ApJ, 760, 76
Girardi, L.,Grebel, E. K.,Odenkirchen, M., et al., 2004, A&A, 422, 205
G´omez, F. A., Minchev, I., O’Shea, B. W., et al. 2013, MNRAS, 429, 159
G´omez, F. A., Minchev, I., O’Shea, B. W., et al. 2012, MNRAS, 423, 3727
G´omez, F. A., Minchev, I., Villalobos, ´A., O’Shea, B. W., & Williams, M. E. K. 2012,
MNRAS, 419, 2163
29. – 29 –
Grillmair, C. J. 2011, ApJ, 738, 98
Grillmair, C. J. 2006, ApJ, 651, L29
Guhathakurta P., Rich R. M., Reitzel D. B., et al., 2006, AJ, 131, 2497
Hou, L. G., & Han, J. L. 2014, A&A, 569, AA125
Ibata, R. A., Irwin, M. J., Lewis, G. F., Ferguson, A. M. N., & Tanvir, N. 2003, MNRAS,
340, L21
Hou, L. G., & Han, J. L. 2014, A&A, 569, AA125
Kalberla, P. M. W., Kerp, J., Dedes, L., & Haud, U. 2014, ApJ, 794, 90
Kazantzidis, S., Bullock, J. S., Zentner, A. R., Kravtsov, A. V., & Moustakas, L. A. 2008,
ApJ, 688, 254
Kraft, R. P., & Ivans, I. I. 2003, PASP, 115, 143
Li, J., Newberg, H. J., Carlin, J. L., et al. 2012, ApJ, 757, 151
L´opez-Corredoira, M., & Molg´o, J. 2014, A&A, 567, A106
Majewski, S. R., Ostheimer, J. C., Rocha-Pinto, H. J., et al. 2004, ApJ, 615, 738
Martin, N. F., Ibata, R. A., Rich, R. M., et al. 2014, ApJ, 787, 19
Martin, N. F., Ibata, R. A., & Irwin, M. 2007, ApJ, 668, L123
Martin, N. F., Ibata, R. A., Bellazzini, M., et al. 2004, MNRAS, 348, 12
McConnachie, A. W., Irwin, M. J., Ibata, R. A., et al. 2009, Nature, 461, 66
McMillan, P. J. 2011, MNRAS, 414, 2446
Michel-Dansac, L., Abadi, M. G., Navarro, J. F., & Steinmetz, M. 2011, MNRAS, 414, L1
Momany, Y., Zaggia, S., Gilmore, G., et al. 2006, A&A, 451, 515
Momany, Y., Zaggia, S. R., Bonifacio, P., et al. 2004, A&A, 421, L29
Newberg, H. J., Yanny, B., Rockosi, C., et al. 2002, ApJ, 569, 245
Newby, M., Newberg, H. J., Simones, J., Cole, N., & Monaco, M. 2011, ApJ, 743, 187
Pe˜narrubia, J., Mart´ınez-Delgado, D., Rix, H. W., et al. 2005, ApJ, 626, 128
30. – 30 –
Purcell, C. W., Bullock, J. S., Tollerud, E. J., Rocha, M., & Chakrabarti, S. 2011, Nature,
477, 301
Reid, N., 1993, ASPC, 49, 37
Robin, A., Creze, M.,1986, A&A, 157, 71
Robin, A. C., Creze, M., & Mohan, V. 1992, ApJ, 400, L25
Rocha-Pinto, H. J., Majewski, S. R., Skrutskie, M. F., & Crane, J. D. 2003, ApJ, 594, L115
Rocha-Pinto, H. J., Majewski, S. R., Skrutskie, M. F., Crane, J. D., & Patterson, R. J. 2004,
ApJ, 615, 732
Schlafly, E. F., & Finkbeiner, D. P. 2011, ApJ, 737, 103
Schlegel, D. J., Finkbeiner, D. P., & Davis, M. 1998, ApJ, 500, 525
Sch¨onrich, R. 2012, MNRAS, 427, 274
Sch¨onrich, R., & Binney, J. 2012, MNRAS, 419, 1546
Sheffield, A. A., Johnston, K. V., Majewski, S. R., et al. 2014, ApJ, 793, 62
Sills, Alison, Pinsonneault, M. H., Terndrup, D. M., 2000, ApJ, 534, 335
Slater, C. T., Bell, E. F., Schlafly, E. F., et al. 2014, ApJ, 791, 9
Sollima, A., Valls-Gabaud, D., Martinez-Delgado, D., et al. 2011, ApJ, 730, L6
Soubiran, C., Bienaym´e, O., & Siebert, A. 2003, A&A, 398, 141
Steinmetz, M., Zwitter, T., Siebert, A., et al. 2006, AJ, 132, 1645
Stoughton, C., Lupton, R. H., Bernardi, M., et al. 2002, AJ, 123, 485
Widrow, L. M., Barber, J., Chequers, M. H., & Cheng, E. 2014, MNRAS, 440, 1971
Widrow, L. M., Gardner, S., Yanny, B., Dodelson, S., & Chen, H.-Y. 2012, ApJ, 750, L41
Williams, M. E. K., Steinmetz, M., Binney, J., et al. 2013, MNRAS, 436, 101
Yanny, B., & Gardner, S. 2013, ApJ, 777, 91
Yanny, B., Rockosi, C., Newberg, H. J., et al. 2009, AJ, 137, 4377
Yanny, B., Newberg, H. J., Grebel, E. K., et al. 2003, ApJ, 588, 824
31. – 31 –
Younger, J. D., Besla, G., Cox, T. J., et al. 2008, ApJ, 676, L21
Zhao, G., Zhao, Y.-H., Chu, Y.-Q., Jing, Y.-P., & Deng, L.-C. 2012, Research in Astronomy
and Astrophysics, 12, 723
This preprint was prepared with the AAS LATEX macros v5.2.
33. – 33 –
Table 2: Summary of parameters in star counts models
parameter fixed or not range,step value
Z0 fixed — 27(pc)
hd not fixed 90∼350(pc),50(pc) 250(pc)
ld fixed — 2250(pc)
htd fixed — 700(pc)
ρ0td not fixed 6.5% ∼ 13%, 1.5% 8%
ρ0halo fixed — 0.125%
q fixed — 0.8
n fixed — 3.5
An not fixed 50 ∼ 200(pc),10(pc) 70(pc)
As not fixed 50 ∼ 200(pc),10(pc) 170(pc)
λn not fixed 3.0 ∼ 7.8,0.3(kpc) 6.3(kpc)
λs not fixed 3.0 ∼ 7.8,0.3(kpc) 7.8(kpc)
rs not fixed 11.4 ∼ 14,0.2(kpc) 14(kpc)
This table summarizes the parameters in our star counts
models. In the top section, we present the parameters for
the simple star counts model with exponential disks and a
cored, power law stellar spheroid. The model that includes
wavelike oscillations uses all of the parameters above the line,
plus the wave parameters in the lower section.
34. – 34 –
Fig. 1.— Sky coverage of photometric data of SDSS DR8 which is used in this work. The green lines
show the patches into which the data was divided.
35. – 35 –
Fig. 2.— g0 vs. (g − r)0 Hess diagrams of SDSS data in 2.5◦
× 2.5◦
patches of sky north of the Galactic
plane. Each panel is labeled with the central longitude of the data in that panel, and the lowest latitude. For
example, the top left panel includes SDSS photometric data with 128.75◦
< l < 131.25◦
, and 10◦
< b < 12.5◦
.
There are possibly two main sequences apparent in each of the patches: a brighter main sequence with a
turnoff near g0 = 16.5, and a fainter main sequence with a turnoff near g0 = 19.5. The fainter main sequence
is associated with the Monoceros Ring. The brighter main sequence (the “near north” structure) is possibly
related to the thin and thick disks, with the fraction of stars in the thin disk increasing at lower latitudes.
While the structure of the fainter main sequence is fairly similar in all panels, the brighter structure is
narrower and bluer at low latitude, and is wider and brighter at higher latitude. The Hess diagram bins are
0.1 wide in magnitude and 0.03 wide in color. The color scale saturates with red at a maximum value of
140, 120, 80, 60, 40, 30, 25, and 20 at latitudes 10◦
, 12.5◦
, 15◦
, 17.5◦
, 20◦
, 22.5◦
, 25◦
, and 27.5◦
, respectively.
36. – 36 –
Fig. 3.— g0 vs. (g − r)0 Hess diagrams of SDSS data in 2.5◦
× 2.5◦
patches of sky south of the
Galactic plane. Each panel is labeled with the central longitude of the data in that panel, and the highest
latitude. For example, the top left panel includes SDSS photometric data with 128.75◦
< l < 131.25◦
, and
−12.5◦
< b < −10◦
. Unlike the north, most of the panels in this figure include only one, broad main sequence
with a turnoff near g0 = 18 (the “south middle” structure), which is half way between the magnitudes of
the turnoffs in the north. The panels further from the Galactic plane include a faint, narrow main sequence
with a turnoff at g0 ∼ 20 that is slightly fainter than the turnoff of the fainter, narrow main sequence in the
north. The Hess diagram bin sizes and color scales are the same as those for the northern panels in Figure
2.
37. – 37 –
Fig. 4.— Hess diagrams showing the asymmetry in star counts north and south of the Galactic plane.
Each panel is the difference of the corresponding panel in Figure 2 minus the same panel in Figure 3.
The grey scale varies with latitude; for panels with Galactic latitude of 10◦
, 12.5◦
, 15◦
, 17.5◦
, 20◦
, 22.5◦
, 25◦
and 27.5◦
, the dynamic range of star counts of each pixel is ±100, ±90, ±80, ±60, ±40, ±30, ±25, and ±20,
respectively. Notice the alternating pattern of black and white stripes as a function of apparent magnitude.
One explanation for this pattern is that the midpoint of the disk could oscillate up and down through the
Galactic plane as a function of distance from the Galactic center. Some of the panels show an excess of M
dwarf stars ((g − r)0 > 1.2) in the south or in the north, or a color offset between the north and south M
dwarfs. These differences are likely due to nearby, low latitude extinction that removes many fainter stars
from the sample in some directions; for example the panels (l, b) = (130◦
, 10◦
) and (l, b) = (203◦
, −10◦
) are
regions of high extinction.
38. – 38 –
Fig. 5.— Sample Hess diagram showing the alternating black and white striping that indicates an
asymmetry in the disk with a sign that alternates in distance from the Galactic center. The top panel is the
result of subtracting a Hess diagram of the southern sky, 176.75◦
< l < 179.25◦
and −17.5◦
< b < −15◦
,
from a Hess diagram of a symmetric section of the northern sky, 176.75◦
< l < 179.25◦
and 15◦
< b < 17.5◦
.
The arrow shows the direction of the reddening vector. Clearly, a poor correction for reddening will not
reduce the measured asymmetry. The lower panel shows the star counts (0.4 < (g − r)0 < 0.5) as a function
of magnitude for the northern patch, the southern patch, and the subtraction of the two. The apparent
magnitudes of the peaks differ by more than a magnitude (a 60% implied distance error). The star counts
can differ by as much as a factor of two between the north and south at a given apparent magnitude.
39. – 39 –
Fig. 6.— SDSS Stellar Spectra. Black dots show the locations of stars with spectra in the SDSS, in the
region near the Galactic anticenter. Red crosses show the positions of the 46 plates (26 in the north and 20
in the south) that were selected to study the metallicities of the nearer ridgelines.
40. – 40 –
Fig. 7.— Selection of spectra in north near and south middle structures. The top panel shows a Hess
diagram of the stars with photometric measurements in SDSS, in the region of the sky near (l, b) = (178◦
, 15◦
).
The lower panel shows a Hess diagram of the corresponding patch of sky south of the Galactic plane. The
positions of SDSS spectra in this region of the sky are overlaid on the CMD; the colors indicate the measured
metallicity of each point as shown in the color bar. A polynomial was fit to the apparent center of the brighter
main sequence of stars in the north, as shown by the solid red line. The dashed lines show the region of
the CMD in which north near spectra were selected. The red lines are also shown on the southern Hess
diagram, to show the selection of the north near comparison spectra. The green line in the lower panel shows
a polynomial fit to the ridgeline of south middle structure. The dashed green lines show the region of the
CMD in which spectra were selected for south middle structure. The green lines are also shown in the upper
panel, indicating the region from which south middle comparison spectra were selected.
41. – 41 –
Fig. 8.— Metallicity distribution in the north near structure, at six different longitudes. We present the
spectra that coincide with the position in the Hess diagrams of the north near structure near b ∼ 15◦
. The
vertical lines at [Fe/H]=-0.6,-1.2 roughly separate stars with the metallicities of the thin disk, thick disk, and
halo populations (Li et al. 2012). The majority of the stars in the north near structure have metallicities
consistent with our expectations for the thin disk. The dashed line shows the median value of [Fe/H] in each
panel.
42. – 42 –
Fig. 9.— Metallicity distribution in the south comparison fields for the north near structure. The dashed
line shows the median value of [Fe/H] in each panel. We present spectra that coincide with the position in
the Hess diagrams of the north near structure at five different Galactic longitudes, but look in the south
near b ∼ −15◦
where we don’t expect to see the north near structure. We see that the stars at a symmetric
distance below the Galactic plane have metallicities that are similar to the north near structure, and match
our expectations for disk stars.
43. – 43 –
Fig. 10.— Metallicity distribution in the south middle structure. We present the metallicities for spectra
that coincide with the position in the Hess diagrams of the south middle structure at five different positions
in the Galaxy, with varying latitude and longitude. The dashed line shows the median value of [Fe/H] in
each panel. Note that stars in the south middle structure that are closer to the Galactic plane have a higher
fraction of stars with metallicities of thin disk stars. Just as with the north near structure, the stars with
spectra in the south middle structure are indistinguishable from disk stars, though a larger fraction have
metallicities of thick disk stars.
44. – 44 –
Fig. 11.— Hess diagrams of sky areas (l,b)=(178◦
, 15◦
), upper panel; and (l,b)=(203◦
, −25◦
), lower panel.
The plus signs in the upper panel indicate the ridge lines of the north near structure and the Monoceros
Ring. The red curve that fits the ridge line of north near structure is an isochrone with [Fe/H]=-0.5, which
is the mean metallicity of the stars in the spectral sample for this strucure. The red curve that fits the
Monoceros Ring is an isochrone matching the globular cluster M5. The plus signs in the lower panel follow
the ridges of the south middle structure and the TriAnd Ring. An isochrone with [Fe/H]=-0.88 is adopted
to fit the peak of the blue stars ((g − r)0 < 0.4) in the south middle structure in this sky area. The M5
isochrone is adopted to fit the TriAnd Ring. The isochrones with [Fe/H]=-0.5 and -0.88 are interpolated
from the empirical isochrons of An et al. (2009).
45. – 45 –
Fig. 12.— We show here the positions of the density peaks projected on the Galactic plane, centered
on the Sun. The upper panel shows peaks above the Galactic plane (b > 0◦
), and the lower panel shows
peaks below the Galactic plane (b < 0◦
) A different symbol is used for each ringlike structure we have
identified: Monoceros Ring - crosses; north near - squares, south middle - diamonds; TriAndromeda -
asterisks; unidentified structure - pink triangles. The color of the symbol (see legend) encodes the Galactic
latitude range used to determine the distance: 12.5◦
< |b| < 15◦
- blue; 15◦
< |b| < 17.5◦
- green; 17.5◦
<
|b| < 20◦
- red; 28◦
< b < 30◦
- black. The Galactic center is at (X, Y ) = (0, 8) kpc. Lines fanning
out radially from the Sun indicate the directions for which there is low latitude data in SDSS, at Galactic
longtudes of 70◦
, 94◦
, 110◦
, 130◦
, 150◦
, 178◦
, 187◦
, 203◦
, and 229◦
. The nodes along the lines are spaced at 2
kpc intervals. The circles are concentric around the Galactic center, at 10 kpc, 15 kpc, 20 kpc.
46. – 46 –
Fig. 13.— Vgsr distribution of stars which sample the north near structure at b ∼ 15◦
. These are the
same stars as are shown in Figure 8. The black histogram shows the Vgsr distribution of the data. The
theoretical Vgsr distribution of thin disk, thick disk, and halo are indicated by the red curve, blue curve, and
yellow curve, respectively. The black curve shows the sum of the three, weighted relative to the fractions of
stars in each metallicity range in Figure 8. The dotted line indicates a 2.5 sigma excess from the theoretical
prediction. The distance and Galactic height are estimated by fitting the isochrone with [Fe/H]=-0.5, which
is the mean metalicity of the spectral sample along the strucure.
47. – 47 –
Fig. 14.— Vgsr distribution of stars in the south middle structure. The model curves areconstructed
similarly to those in Figure 13. The fraction of theoretical thin disk, thick disk, halo are determined from
the fraction of stars in each metallicity region in Figure 10.
48. – 48 –
Fig. 15.— Vgsr distribution of stars with metallicities of disk stars in the north near structure, fit with the
result of a dynamics equation from Sch¨onrich & Binney (2012), which includes the asymmetric drift. The
black histogram is the Vgsr distribution of data higher metallicity stars that are likely to be thin and thick
disk members, while the red curve is the expected Vgsr distribution. The black dotted curve indicates where
a 2.5 sigma overdensity would lie. Note that the fit to the velocity distribution is significantly improved
when asymmetric drift is included in the model.
49. – 49 –
Fig. 16.— Vgsr distribution of stars with metallicities of disk stars in the south middle structure, fit with
the result of a dynamics equation from Sch¨onrich & Binney (2012), which includes the asymmetric drift.
There are only three fields in the south that are close enough to the plane that we can use the parameters in
the published paper to generate a model to compare with the data. Attempts to extrapolate the parameters
to larger distances from the Galactic plane were not successful in fitting the observed velocity distributions.
50. – 50 –
Fig. 17.— Apparent magnitude distrubution of early K-type stars compared to a standard Galactic model.
The black histograms show the number of K stars as a function of apparent magnitude in each plate. The
red curve is theoretical thin disk star counts; the blue curve is theoretical thick disk star counts; the yellow
curve is theoretical halo star counts; and the black curve is the sum of the three theoretical star counts.
Panels where these curves are shown as dashed lines were not used in finding the best fit disk parameters,
since these regions are of relatively high extinction. Note that this simple model is a very poor fit to the
data.