3D kinematics through the X-shaped Milky Way bulge
S. V\'asquez, M. Zoccali, V. Hill, A. Renzini, O. A. Gonz\'alez, E., Gardner, Victor P. Debattista, A. C. Robin, M. Rejkuba, M. Baffico, M., Monelli, V. Motta, D. Minniti

TL;DR
This study investigates the 3D kinematics of stars in the Milky Way's X-shaped bulge, providing observational evidence for orbital motions predicted by dynamical models of bulge formation.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed comparison of 3D stellar kinematics with models for the Milky Way's X-shaped bulge, revealing orbital patterns and metallicity distributions.
Findings
Stars on elongated orbits show streaming motions consistent with X-shape models.
Metal-poor stars tend to follow elongated orbits, while metal-rich stars are more axisymmetric.
Proper motions align with predictions from dynamical models of peanut-shaped bulges.
Abstract
It has recently been discovered that the Galactic bulge is X-shaped, with the two southern arms of the X both crossing the lines of sight at l=0 and |b|>4, hence producing a double red clump (RC) in the bulge CMD. Dynamical models predict the formation of X-shaped bulges, as extreme cases of boxy-peanut bulges. However, since X-shaped bulges were known to be present only in external galaxies, models have never been compared to 3D kinematical data for individual stars. We study the orbital motion of Galactic bulge stars, in the two arms of the X in the southern hemisphere. The goal is to provide observational constraints to bulge formation models that predict the formation of X-shapes through bar dynamical instabilities. Radial velocities have been obtained for a sample of 454 bulge giants, roughly equally distributed between the bright and faint RC, in a field at (l,b)=(0,-6). Proper…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
