A high pitch angle structure in the Sagittarius Arm
M. A. Kuhn (1), R. A. Benjamin (2), C. Zucker (3), A. Krone-Martins, (4,5), R. S. de Souza (6), A. Castro-Ginard (7), E. E. O. Ishida (8,9), M. S., Povich (10), L. A. Hillenbrand (1), ((1) Caltech, (2) University of, Wisconsin-Whitewater, (3) Harvard-Smithsonian CfA

TL;DR
This study maps star-forming regions in the Sagittarius Arm, revealing a high pitch angle structure with coherent motions, challenging traditional models of the spiral arm’s geometry.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed 3D mapping of star-forming regions in a segment of the Sagittarius Arm, identifying a high pitch angle structure with coherent kinematics.
Findings
Identified 25 star-forming regions in a narrow, linear structure.
Measured a high pitch angle of 56 degrees for this structure.
Found coherent velocities with slight drifts and specific rotational shear.
Abstract
Context: In spiral galaxies, star formation tends to trace features of the spiral pattern, including arms, spurs, feathers, and branches. However, in our own Milky Way, it has been challenging to connect individual star-forming regions to their larger Galactic environment owing to our perspective from within the disk. One feature in nearly all modern models of the Milky Way is the Sagittarius Arm, located inward of the Sun with a pitch angle of ~12 deg. Aims: We map the 3D locations and velocities of star-forming regions in a segment of the Sagittarius Arm using young stellar objects (YSOs) from the Spitzer/IRAC Candidate YSO (SPICY) catalog to compare their distribution to models of the arm. Methods: Distances and velocities for these objects are derived from Gaia EDR3 astrometry and molecular line surveys. We infer parallaxes and proper motions for spatially clustered groups of YSOs…
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