Virial Sequences for Thick Discs and Haloes: Flattening and Global Anisotropy
A. Agnello (Cambridge), N. W. Evans (Cambridge)

TL;DR
This paper uses the virial theorem to relate the velocity dispersion ratios to the flattening of dark haloes and stellar populations, providing new methods to measure dark matter shape and analyzing the structure of the Milky Way.
Contribution
It introduces a flattening theorem linking velocity dispersions to halo shape and applies virial sequences to thick discs and haloes, offering new insights into galactic structure.
Findings
Milky Way's dark halo is oblate with flattening g ~ 0.85.
Dual halo structure is inconsistent with the virial theorem.
Good match between models and observed thick disc properties.
Abstract
The virial theorem prescribes the ratio of the globally-averaged equatorial to vertical velocity dispersion of a tracer population in spherical and flattened dark haloes. This gives sequences of physical models in the plane of global anisotropy and flattening. The tracer may have any density, though there are particularly simple results for power-laws and exponentials. We prove the flattening theorem: for a spheroidally stratified tracer density with axis ratio q in a dark density potential with axis ratio g, the ratio of globally averaged equatorial to vertical velocity dispersion depends only on q/g. As the stellar halo density and velocity dispersion of the Milky Way are accessible to observations, this provides a new method for measuring the flattening of the dark matter. If the kinematics of the local halo subdwarfs are representative, then the Milky Way's dark halo is oblate with…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
