Vertical stellar density distribution in a non-isothermal galactic disc
Suchira Sarkar, Chanda J. Jog

TL;DR
This study investigates how non-isothermal vertical velocity dispersion affects the stellar density distribution in galactic discs, revealing a more extended distribution and lower mid-plane density compared to isothermal assumptions, aligning better with observations.
Contribution
It provides a self-consistent analysis of non-isothermal effects on vertical stellar density, incorporating stars, gas, and dark matter, and compares with traditional isothermal models.
Findings
Non-isothermal dispersion increases scale height by ~35%.
Distribution fits a double sech^2 profile, mimicking a thicker disc.
Total mid-plane density estimate decreases by 16%.
Abstract
The vertical density distribution of stars in a galactic disc is traditionally obtained by assuming an isothermal vertical velocity dispersion of stars. Recent observations from SDSS, LAMOST, RAVE, Gaia etc show that this dispersion increases with height from the mid-plane. Here we study the dynamical effect of such non-isothermal dispersion on the self-consistent vertical density distribution for the thin disc stars in the Galaxy, obtained by solving together the Poisson equation and the equation of hydrostatic equilibrium. We find that in the non-isothermal case the mid-plane density is lower, and the scale height is higher than the corresponding values for the isothermal distribution, due to higher vertical pressure, hence the distribution is vertically more extended. The change is ~35% at the solar radius for a stars-alone disc for the typical observed linear gradient of +6.7 km…
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