Trigonometric Parallaxes Of High-Mass Star Forming Regions: Our View Of The Milky Way
M. J. Reid, K. M. Menten, A. Brunthaler, X. W. Zheng, T. M. Dame, Y., Xu, J. Li, N. Sakai, Y. Wu, K. Immer, B. Zhang, A. Sanna, L. Moscadelli, K., L. J. Rygl, A. Bartkiewicz, B. Hu, L. H. Quiroga-Nunez, H. J. van, Langevelde

TL;DR
This study uses ~200 high-mass star-forming region parallaxes to refine the Milky Way's spiral structure, measure key Galactic parameters, and analyze stellar motions, providing a detailed model of our Galaxy's shape and dynamics.
Contribution
It presents an updated spiral structure model of the Milky Way based on extensive parallax data and refines fundamental Galactic parameters such as the distance to the Galactic center and rotation speed.
Findings
Milky Way has a four-arm spiral structure.
Distance to Galactic center is 8.15 kpc.
Circular rotation speed at Sun's position is 236 km/s.
Abstract
We compile and analyze ~200 trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions of molecular masers associated with very young high-mass stars. These measurements strongly suggest that the Milky Way is a four-arm spiral. Fitting log-periodic spirals to the locations of the masers, allows us to significantly expand our view of the structure of the Milky Way. We present an updated model for its spiral structure and incorporate it into our previously published parallax-based distance-estimation program for sources associated with spiral arms. Modeling the three-dimensional space motions yields estimates of the distance to the Galactic center, Ro = 8.15 +/- 0.15 kpc, the circular rotation speed at the Sun's position, To = 236 +/- 7 km/s, and the nature of the rotation curve. Our data strongly constrain the full circular velocity of the Sun, To + Vsun = 247 +/- 4 km/s, and its angular velocity, (To…
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