A measurement of the Galactic plane mass density from binary pulsar accelerations
Sukanya Chakrabarti, Philip Chang, Michael T. Lam, Sarah J. Vigeland,, Alice C. Quillen

TL;DR
This study uses high-precision pulsar timing to measure the Galactic mid-plane mass density and dark matter content, providing new constraints on Galactic structure and potential oblateness, with implications for dark matter and gravity theories.
Contribution
First direct measurement of the Galactic Oort limit using binary pulsar accelerations, offering a novel approach to Galactic mass modeling.
Findings
Oort limit estimated at 0.08 M_sun/pc^3 with uncertainties
Local dark matter density consistent with current estimates within errors
Potential oblateness aligns with disk-dominated models
Abstract
We use compiled high-precision pulsar timing measurements to directly measure the Galactic acceleration of binary pulsars relative to the Solar System barycenter. Given the vertical accelerations, we use the Poisson equation to derive the Oort limit, i.e., the total volume mass density in the Galactic mid-plane. Our best-fitting model gives an Oort limit of , which is close to estimates from recent Jeans analyses. Given the accounting of the baryon budget from McKee et al. (2015), we obtain a local dark matter density of , which is slightly below other modern estimates but consistent within the current uncertainties of our method. While this first measurement of the Oort limit (and other Galactic parameters) has error bars that are currently several times larger than kinematical estimates, they should…
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