The disc origin of the Milky Way bulge: On the high velocity dispersion of metal-rich stars at low latitude
Tristan Boin, Paola Di Matteo, Sergey Khoperskov, Francesca Fragkoudi,, Soumavo Ghosh, Fran\c{c}oise Combes, Misha Haywood, David Katz

TL;DR
This study investigates the varying velocity dispersion of stars in the Milky Way bulge based on metallicity and latitude, using APOGEE data and N-body simulations to explain the observed trends.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that the velocity dispersion inversion in the Galactic bulge can be explained by a model where the bulge is a boxy/peanut-shaped structure formed from the thin and thick discs.
Findings
Velocity dispersion trends depend on metallicity and latitude.
N-body simulations reproduce the observed inversion of velocity dispersion.
Metal-rich stars are mainly from the thin disc and show high velocity dispersions at low latitudes.
Abstract
Previous studies of the chemo-kinematic properties of stars in the Galactic bulge have revealed a puzzling trend. Along the bulge minor axis, and close to the Galactic plane, metal-rich stars display a higher line-of-sight velocity dispersion compared to metal-poor stars, while at higher latitudes metal-rich stars have lower velocity dispersions than metal-poor stars, similar to what is found in the Galactic disc. In this work, we re-examine this issue, by studying the dependence of line-of-sight velocity dispersions on metallicity and latitude in the latest APOGEE Data Release 17, confirming the results of previous works. We then analyse an N-body simulation of a Milky Way-like galaxy, also taking into account observational biases introduced by the APOGEE selection function. We show that the inversion in the line-of-sight velocity dispersion-latitude relation observed in the Galactic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
