Mapping Milky Way disk perturbations in stellar number density and vertical velocity using Gaia DR3
Axel Widmark, Lawrence M. Widrow, Aneesh Naik

TL;DR
This study maps the Milky Way's stellar density and vertical velocity using Gaia DR3 data, revealing significant non-axisymmetric features and local disturbances like spiral arms and warps.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, non-parametric map of the Milky Way's disk perturbations, highlighting local features and phase relationships in stellar density and velocity fields.
Findings
Detection of non-axisymmetric density and velocity features.
Identification of a phase-shifted breathing mode.
Observation of a radial gradient linked to the Galactic warp.
Abstract
We have mapped the number density and mean vertical velocity of the Milky Way's stellar disk out to roughly two kiloparsecs from the Sun using Gaia Data Release 3 (DR3) and complementary photo-astrometric distance information from StarHorse. For the number counts, we carefully masked spatial regions that are compromised by open clusters, great distances, or dust extinction and used Gaussian processes to arrive at a smooth, non-parametric estimate for the underlying number density field. We find that the number density and velocity fields depart significantly from an axisymmetric and mirror-symmetric model. These departures, which include projections of the Gaia phase-space spiral, signal the presence of local disturbances in the disk. We identify two features that are present in both stellar number density and mean vertical velocity. One of these features appears to be associated with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
