Evidence of distant spiral arms in the Galactic disk quadrant IV from VVV red clump giants
R. Kammers, R. K. Saito, E. Botan, D. Minniti, J. Alonso-Garc\'ia, L., C. Smith, and P. W. Lucas

TL;DR
This study uses VVV near-IR extinction maps and red clump giants to identify and analyze distant spiral arms in the far side of the Milky Way, revealing structures not accounted for in current models.
Contribution
It introduces new near-IR windows for studying the far side of the MW and maps spiral arms using RC stars, providing kinematic confirmation of these structures.
Findings
Identification of two new near-IR windows in the MW disk
Detection of spiral arm overdensities at large distances
Confirmation of spiral arm kinematics sharing Galactic rotation
Abstract
The discovery of new clear windows in the Galactic plane using the VVV near-IR extinction maps allows the study of the structure of the Milky Way (MW) disk. The ultimate goal of this work is to map the spiral arms in the far side of the MW, which is a relatively unexplored region of our Galaxy, using red clump (RC) giants as distance indicators. We search for near-IR clear windows located at low Galactic latitudes ( deg) in the MW disk using the VVV near-IR extinction maps. We have identified two new windows named VVV WIN 1607-5258 and VVV WIN 1475-5877, respectively, that complement the previously known window VVV WIN 1713-3939. We analyse the distribution of RC stars in these three clear near-IR windows and measure their number density along the line of sight. This allows us to find overdensities in the distribution and measure their distances along the line of sight. We then…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
