ARGOS IV: The Kinematics of the Milky Way Bulge
M. Ness, K. Freeman, E. Athanassoula, E. Wylie-de-Boer, J., Bland-Hawthorn, M. Asplund, G.F Lewis, D. Yong, R.R. Lane, L.L Kiss, R., Ibata

TL;DR
This study analyzes the kinematics of approximately 17,400 stars in the Milky Way bulge to understand its formation, finding evidence for a cylindrically rotating bulge with distinct metallicity populations, supporting a disk instability origin.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed kinematic analysis of a large stellar sample in the Galactic bulge, distinguishing multiple populations and their formation implications.
Findings
The bulge exhibits cylindrical rotation transitioning into the disk.
A metal-poor, non-rotating population is identified within the bulge.
Results support formation from disk instabilities over mergers.
Abstract
We present the kinematic results from our ARGOS spectroscopic survey of the Galactic bulge of the Milky Way. Our aim is to understand the formation of the Galactic bulge. We examine the kinematics of about 17,400 stars in the bulge located within 3.5 kpc of the Galactic centre, identified from the 28,000 star ARGOS survey. We aim to determine if the formation of the bulge has been internally driven from disk instabilities as suggested by its boxy shape, or if mergers have played a significant role as expected from Lambda CDM simulations. From our velocity measurements across latitudes b = -5 deg, -7.5 deg and -10 deg we find the bulge to be a cylindrically rotating system that transitions smoothly out into the disk. Within the bulge, we find a kinematically distinct metal-poor population ([Fe/H] < -1.0) that is not rotating cylindrically. The 5% of our stars with [Fe/H] < -1.0 are a…
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