Gaia Data Release 2: Mapping the Milky Way disc kinematics
Gaia Collaboration: D. Katz, T. Antoja, M. Romero-G\'omez, R. Drimmel,, C. Reyl\'e, G.M. Seabroke, C. Soubiran, C. Babusiaux, P. Di Matteo, F., Figueras, E. Poggio, A.C. Robin, D.W. Evans, 440 DPAC co-authors

TL;DR
This paper uses Gaia DR2 data to create detailed 3D maps of the Milky Way disc's kinematics, revealing complex velocity patterns, streaming motions, and new substructures across different regions of the galaxy.
Contribution
First comprehensive 3D kinematic maps of the Milky Way disc using Gaia DR2, unveiling complex velocity structures and non-axisymmetric motions.
Findings
Confirmed radial velocity gradients in the inner and outer disc.
Mapped velocity dispersions with unprecedented accuracy.
Discovered new substructures and variations in velocity space.
Abstract
To illustrate the potential of GDR2, we provide a first look at the kinematics of the Milky Way disc, within a radius of several kiloparsecs around the Sun. We benefit for the first time from a sample of 6.4 million F-G-K stars with full 6D phase-space coordinates, precise parallaxes, and precise Galactic cylindrical velocities . From this sample, we extracted a sub-sample of 3.2 million giant stars to map the velocity field of the Galactic disc from 5~kpc to 13~kpc from the Galactic centre and up to 2~kpc above and below the plane. We also study the distribution of 0.3 million solar neighbourhood stars (~pc), with median velocity uncertainties of 0.4~km/s, in velocity space and use the full sample to examine how the over-densities evolve in more distant regions. GDR2 allows us to draw 3D maps of the Galactocentric median velocities and velocity dispersions with…
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