Trigonometric Parallaxes of Massive Star Forming Regions: VI. Galactic Structure, Fundamental Parameters and Non-Circular Motions
M. J. Reid, K. M. Menten, X. W. Zheng, A. Brunthaler, L. Moscadelli,, Y. Xu, B. Zhang, M. Sato, M. Honma, T. Hirota, K. Hachisuka, Y. K. Choi, G., A. Moellenbrock, A. Bartkiewicz

TL;DR
This study uses VLBA and VERA to measure parallaxes and motions of star-forming regions, refining the Milky Way's structure, fundamental parameters, and revealing non-circular motions and a nearly flat rotation curve.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of Galactic parameters, supports a four-arm spiral model, and introduces improved methods for distance estimation and Galactic coordinate definitions.
Findings
Perseus arm has a pitch angle of 16 +/- 3 degrees.
Galactic center distance R_o = 8.4 +/- 0.6 kpc.
Rotation speed Theta_o = 254 +/- 16 km/s.
Abstract
We are using the VLBA and the Japanese VERA project to measure trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions of masers found in high-mass star-forming regions across the Milky Way. Early results from 18 sources locate several spiral arms. The Perseus spiral arm has a pitch angle of 16 +/- 3 degrees, which favors four rather than two spiral arms for the Galaxy. Combining positions, distances, proper motions, and radial velocities yields complete 3-dimensional kinematic information. We find that star forming regions on average are orbiting the Galaxy ~15 km/s slower than expected for circular orbits. By fitting the measurements to a model of the Galaxy, we estimate the distance to the Galactic center R_o = 8.4 +/- 0.6 kpc and a circular rotation speed Theta_o = 254 +/- 16 km/s. The ratio Theta_o/R_o can be determined to higher accuracy than either parameter individually, and we find it to…
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