The Circular Velocity Curve of the Milky Way from $5$ to $25$ kpc
Anna-Christina Eilers, David W. Hogg, Hans-Walter Rix, Melissa Ness

TL;DR
This study precisely measures the Milky Way's circular velocity from 5 to 25 kpc, revealing a declining velocity curve and estimating the galaxy's dark matter halo mass and local dark matter density.
Contribution
It provides the most precise circular velocity curve of the Milky Way between 5 and 25 kpc, using a large dataset and advanced modeling, and estimates dark matter properties.
Findings
Circular velocity at Sun's location: 229 km/s with 0.2 km/s uncertainty.
Velocity curve declines at -1.7 km/s/kpc beyond 5 kpc.
Dark halo mass within virial radius: 7.25 x 10^11 solar masses.
Abstract
We measure the circular velocity curve of the Milky Way with the highest precision to date across Galactocentric distances of kpc. Our analysis draws on the -dimensional phase-space coordinates of luminous red-giant stars, for which we previously determined precise parallaxes using a data-driven model that combines spectral data from APOGEE with photometric information from WISE, 2MASS, and Gaia. We derive the circular velocity curve with the Jeans equation assuming an axisymmetric gravitational potential. At the location of the Sun we determine the circular velocity with its formal uncertainty to be with systematic uncertainties at the level. We find that the velocity curve is gently but significantly declining at , with a…
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