Searching for spiral features in the outer Galactic disk. The field towards WR38 and WR38a
Giovanni Carraro (ESO-Santiago), Edgardo Costa (UChile)

TL;DR
This study uses deep optical photometry to detect and characterize spiral arm features in the outer Galactic disk, revealing the Perseus arm beyond previous limits and clarifying the nature of a distant stellar group.
Contribution
First optical detection of the Perseus arm in the fourth Galactic quadrant and demonstration of optical photometry's effectiveness in mapping outer spiral structures.
Findings
Detected the Perseus arm at 12.7 kpc in the fourth quadrant.
First optical detection of the Perseus arm in this region.
Identified the distant group as a diffuse young population, not a star cluster.
Abstract
The detailed spiral structure in the outer Galactic disk is still poorly known, and for several Galactic directions we rely on model extrapolations. One of these regions is the fourth Galactic quadrant, in the sector comprised between Vela and Carina (270 <l< 300) where no spiral arms have been detected so far in the optical beyond 270. By means of deep UBVI photometry, we search for spiral features in known low absorption windows.U photometry, although demanding, constitutes a powerful tool to detect and characterize distant aggregates, and allows to derive firmer distance estimates. We studied a direction close to the tangent (l=290) to the Carina arm, in an attempt to detect optical spiral tracers beyond the Carina branch, where radio observations and models predictions indicate the presence of the extension of the Perseus and Norma-Cygnus spiral arms in the fourth quadrant.Along…
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