The Milky Way's circular velocity curve between 4 and 14 kpc from APOGEE data
Jo Bovy (IAS), Carlos Allende Prieto, Timothy C. Beers, Dmitry, Bizyaev, Luiz N. da Costa, Katia Cunha, Garrett L. Ebelke, Daniel J., Eisenstein, Peter M. Frinchaboy, Ana Elia Garc\'ia P\'erez, L\'eo Girardi,, Fred R. Hearty, David W. Hogg, Jon Holtzman, Marcio A. G. Maia

TL;DR
This study measures the Milky Way's rotation curve between 4 and 14 kpc using APOGEE data, finding a nearly flat curve with a local circular velocity around 218 km/s and estimating the dark halo mass.
Contribution
First measurement of the Milky Way's rotation curve in this range using APOGEE data, including detailed modeling and systematic uncertainty analysis.
Findings
Local circular velocity V_c(R_0) = 218 +/- 6 km/s
Rotation curve is approximately flat within the studied range
Dark halo mass within virial radius is ~8x10^{11} solar masses
Abstract
We measure the Milky Way's rotation curve over the Galactocentric range 4 kpc <~ R <~ 14 kpc from the first year of data from the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE). We model the line-of-sight velocities of 3,365 stars in fourteen fields with b = 0 deg between 30 deg < l < 210 deg out to distances of 10 kpc using an axisymmetric kinematical model that includes a correction for the asymmetric drift of the warm tracer population (\sigma_R ~ 35 km/s). We determine the local value of the circular velocity to be V_c(R_0) = 218 +/- 6 km/s and find that the rotation curve is approximately flat with a local derivative between -3.0 km/s/kpc and 0.4 km/s/kpc. We also measure the Sun's position and velocity in the Galactocentric rest frame, finding the distance to the Galactic center to be 8 kpc < R_0 < 9 kpc, radial velocity V_{R,sun} = -10 +/- 1 km/s, and rotational…
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