Astrometric mock observations for determining the local dark matter density
Shigeki Inoue, Naoteru Gouda

TL;DR
This paper evaluates a new method for measuring the local dark matter density using stellar data, analyzing how observational errors affect its accuracy and determining the necessary data precision for reliable results.
Contribution
The study scrutinizes a novel method for LDMD estimation, assessing observational uncertainties and establishing data quality requirements for accurate measurements.
Findings
Parallax errors can cause overestimation of LDMD.
Gaia data will likely enable precise LDMD determination.
Method is effective with sufficient observational accuracy.
Abstract
To determine the local dark matter density (LDMD) of the solar system is a classical problem in astronomy. Recently, a novel method of determining the LDMD from stellar distribution and vertical velocity dispersion profiles perpendicular to the Galactic plane was devised. This method has the advantage of abolishing conventional approximations and using only a few assumptions. Our aims are to carefully scrutinize this method and to examine influences by uncertainties of astrometric observations. We discuss how the determinations of the LDMD vary with observational precisions on parallax, proper motion, and line-of-sight velocity measurements. To examine the influences by the observational imprecision, we created mock observation data for stars that are dynamical tracers based on an analytical galaxy model and applied parametrized observational errors to the mock data. We evaluated the…
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