Towards a direct measure of the Galactic acceleration
Sukanya Chakrabarti, Jason Wright, Philip Chang, Alice Quillen, Peter, Craig, Joey Territo, Elena D'Onghia, Kathryn V. Johnston, Robert J. De Rosa,, Daniel Huber, Katherine L. Rhode, Eric Nielsen

TL;DR
High precision spectroscopic measurements over a decade can directly detect the Galactic acceleration, providing a new method to measure dark matter density near the Sun, with minimal contamination from planetary signals.
Contribution
This work demonstrates the feasibility of measuring Galactic acceleration directly using high precision radial velocities, incorporating theoretical models, simulations, and analysis of existing survey data.
Findings
RV slope measurements agree with Galactic acceleration expectations
Error in slope scales inversely with square root of observations
Planetary companions contribute minimally to the acceleration signal
Abstract
High precision spectrographs can enable not only the discovery of exoplanets, but can also provide a fundamental measurement in Galactic dynamics. Over about ten year baselines, the expected change in the line-of-sight velocity due to the Galaxy's gravitational field for stars at kpc scale distances above the Galactic mid-plane is few - 10 cm/s, and may be detectable by the current generation of high precision spectrographs. Here, we provide theoretical expectations for this measurement based on both static models of the Milky Way and isolated Milky Way simulations, as well from controlled dynamical simulations of the Milky Way interacting with dwarf galaxies. We simulate a population synthesis model to analyze the contribution of planets and binaries to the Galactic acceleration signal. We find that while low-mass, long-period planetary companions are a contaminant to the…
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