The kinematic identification of a thick stellar disc in M31
M. L. M. Collins, S. C. Chapman, R. A. Ibata, M. J. Irwin, R. M. Rich,, A. M. N. Ferguson, G. F. Lewis, N. Tanvir, A. Koch

TL;DR
This study characterizes the thick stellar disc in M31 using kinematic data, revealing its properties such as lag, dispersion, metallicity, scale length, and height, providing insights into its formation and comparison with the Milky Way.
Contribution
First kinematic characterization of M31's thick disc, measuring its properties and mass, offering new constraints on thick disc formation mechanisms.
Findings
Thick disc lags by 46 km/s relative to the thin disc.
Thick disc has higher velocity dispersion (50.8 km/s) than the thin disc.
Thick disc is more metal-poor ([Fe/H] = -1.0) than the thin disc.
Abstract
We present the first characterization of a thick disc component in the Andromeda galaxy (M31) using kinematic data from the DEIMOS multi-object spectrograph instrument on Keck II. Using 21 fields in the South West of the galaxy, we measure the lag of this component with respect to the thin disc, as well as the dispersion, metallicity and scale length of the component. We find an average lag between the two components of <dv>=46.0+/-3.9km/s. The velocity dispersion of the thick disc is sigma_{thick}=50.8+/-1.9km/s, greater than the value of dispersion we determine for the thin disc, sigma_{thin}=35.7+/-1.0km/s. The thick disc is more metal poor than the thin disc, with [Fe/H]_{spec}=-1.0+/-0.1 compared to [Fe/H]_{spec}=-0.7+/-0.05 for the thin disc. We measure a radial scale length of the thin and thick discs of h_r=7.3+/-1.0 kpc and h_r=8.0+/-1.2 kpc. From this, we infer scale heights…
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