Constraining the Galaxy's dark halo with RAVE stars
T. Piffl, J. Binney, P. J. McMillan, M. Steinmetz, A. Helmi, R. F. G., Wyse, O. Bienaym\'e, J. Bland-Hawthorn, K. Freeman, B. Gibson, G. Gilmore, E., K. Grebel, G. Kordopatis, J. F. Navarro, Q. Parker, W. A. Reid, G. Seabroke,, A. Siebert, F. Watson, T. Zwitter

TL;DR
This study uses the kinematics of approximately 200,000 giant stars near the Sun to measure the local mass density and constrain the shape and amount of dark matter in the Galaxy's halo, finding a mildly oblate halo with significant baryonic contribution.
Contribution
First detailed dynamical analysis combining RAVE star data with action-based models to constrain the Galaxy's dark halo shape and local dark matter density.
Findings
Dark mass within the isodensity surface: (6±0.9)×10^{10} M_sun
Surface density within 0.9 kpc: (69±10) M_sun/pc^2
Hints for a mildly oblate dark halo with q ≈ 0.8
Abstract
We use the kinematics of giant stars that lie within kpc of the plane to measure the vertical profile of mass density near the Sun. We find that the dark mass contained within the isodensity surface of the dark halo that passes through the Sun (), and the surface density within kpc of the plane () are almost independent of the (oblate) halo's axis ratio . If the halo is spherical, 46 per cent of the radial force on the Sun is provided by baryons, and only 4.3 per cent of the Galaxy's mass is baryonic. If the halo is flattened, the baryons contribute even less strongly to the local radial force and to the Galaxy's mass. The dark-matter density at the location of the Sun is . When combined…
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