Stars, Gas, and Dark Matter in the Solar Neighborhood
Christopher F. McKee, Antonio Parravano, David J. Hollenbach

TL;DR
This paper reviews and updates measurements of the baryonic components in the solar neighborhood, providing refined estimates of their surface densities and discussing implications for local dark matter density.
Contribution
It offers new reanalyzed data and tables on stellar and gas surface densities, and refines the local dark matter density estimate based on these measurements.
Findings
Total surface density of M dwarfs: 17.3 ± 2.3 Mo/pc^2
Total local surface density of stars and remnants: 33.4 ± 3 Mo/pc^2
Local dark matter density: 0.013 ± 0.003 Mo/pc^3
Abstract
The surface density and vertical distribution of stars, stellar remnants, and gas in the solar vicinity form important ingredients for understanding the star formation history of the Galaxy as well as for inferring the local density of dark matter by using stellar kinematics to probe the gravitational potential. In this paper we review the literature for these baryonic components, reanalyze data, and provide tables of the surface densities and exponential scale heights of main sequence stars, giants, brown dwarfs, and stellar remnants. We also review three components of gas (H2, HI, and HII), give their surface densities at the solar circle, and discuss their vertical distribution. We find a local total surface density of M dwarfs of 17.3 pm 2.3 Mo/pc^2. Our result for the total local surface density of visible stars, 27.0 pm 2.7 Mo/pc^2, is close to previous estimates due to a…
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