Vertical velocities from proper motions of red clump giants
M. Lopez-Corredoira, H. Abedi, F. Garzon, F. Figueras

TL;DR
This study maps the vertical velocities of Milky Way disk stars using proper motions of red clump giants, revealing the warp's long-term stability and transient features, and discusses future improvements with Gaia data.
Contribution
It provides a novel analysis of Galactic warp dynamics using proper motions of red clump giants and models the warp's evolution with new kinematic data.
Findings
The warp's main structure is long-lived.
Southern warp shows transient behavior.
Future Gaia data will significantly improve motion accuracy.
Abstract
We derive the vertical velocities of disk stars in the range of Galactocentric radii of R=5-16 kpc within 2 kpc in height from the Galactic plane. This kinematic information is connected to dynamical aspects in the formation and evolution of the Milky Way, such as the passage of satellites and vertical resonance and determines whether the warp is a long-lived or a transient feature. We used the proper motions of the PPMXL survey, correcting of systematic errors with the reference of quasars. From the color-magnitude diagram K versus (J-K) we selected the standard candles corresponding to red clump giants and used the information of their proper motions to build a map of the vertical motions of our Galaxy. We derived the kinematics of the warp both analytically and through a particle simulation to fit these data. Complementarily, we also carried out the same analysis with red clump…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
