The Shape and Profile of the Milky Way Halo as Seen by the CFHT Legacy Survey
Branimir Sesar, Mario Juric, Zeljko Ivezic

TL;DR
This study analyzes the structure of the Milky Way halo using CFHT data, revealing a steepening density profile beyond 28 kpc, a consistent oblateness, and detecting the Sagittarius and Monoceros streams, providing new constraints on halo models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of the halo's density profile, shape, and substructure using CFHT data calibrated to SDSS, and tests models against observed stellar distributions.
Findings
Halo density profile steepens beyond 28 kpc
Best-fit Einasto profile parameters determined
Sagittarius and Monoceros streams detected
Abstract
We use Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey data for 170 deg^2, recalibrated and transformed to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey ugri photometric system, to study the distribution of near-turnoff main-sequence stars in the Galactic halo along four lines of sight to heliocentric distances of ~35 kpc. We find that the halo stellar number density profile becomes steeper at Galactocentric distances greater than R_{gal}~28 kpc, with the power law index changing from n_{inner}=-2.62+-0.04 to n_{outer}=-3.8+-0.1. In particular, we test a series of single power law models and find them to be strongly disfavored by the data. The parameters for the best-fit Einasto profile are n=2.2+-0.2 and R_e=22.2+-0.4 kpc. We measure the oblateness of the halo to be q=c/a=0.70+-0.01 and detect no evidence of it changing across the range of probed distances. The Sagittarius stream is detected in the l=173…
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