The escape speed curve of the Galaxy obtained from Gaia DR2 implies a heavy Milky Way
Giacomo Monari, Benoit Famaey, Ismael Carrillo, Tilmann Piffl,, Matthias Steinmetz, Rosemary F. G. Wyse, Friedrich Anders, Cristina, Chiappini, Katja Janssen

TL;DR
This study measures the Milky Way's escape speed curve using Gaia DR2 data, revealing a heavy dark matter halo with high concentration and mass estimates consistent with Lambda-CDM predictions.
Contribution
First measurement of the Galaxy's escape speed curve from Gaia DR2 halo star velocities, constraining the Milky Way's dark matter halo properties.
Findings
Local escape speed at Sun's position: 580 km/s
Dark matter halo mass: approximately 1.3 to 1.55 trillion solar masses
High halo concentration: around 8 to 11
Abstract
We measure the escape speed curve of the Milky Way based on the analysis of the velocity distribution of counter-rotating halo stars from the Gaia DR2. The distances were estimated through the StarHorse code, and only stars with distance errors smaller than 10 per cent were used in the study. The escape speed curve is measured at Galactocentric radii ranging from kpc to kpc. The local Galactic escape at the Sun's position is estimated to be , and it rises towards the Galactic center. Defined as the minimum speed required to reach three virial radii, our estimate of the escape speed as a function of radius implies, for a Navarro-Frenk-White profile and local circular velocity of , a dark matter mass and a high concentration…
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