The Milky Way is a less massive galaxy--new estimates of the Milky Way's local and global stellar masses
Jianhui Lian (Yunnan Uni.), Tao Wang (Yunnan Uni.), Qikang Feng (Peking Uni.), Yang Huang (U of Chinese Academy of Sciences), and Helong Guo (Yunnan Uni.)

TL;DR
This study uses Gaia and APOGEE data to accurately estimate the Milky Way's stellar mass, revealing it to be about half of previous estimates, which impacts our understanding of galaxy properties and dark matter content.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed local and global stellar mass density profiles of the Milky Way, leading to a significantly lower total stellar mass estimate than prior studies.
Findings
Milky Way's total stellar mass is approximately 2.6×10^{10} solar masses.
The local surface stellar mass density is about 31.56 M_sun/pc^2.
The inner disk profile was previously unknown and led to overestimations.
Abstract
Stellar mass is the most fundamental property of a galaxy. While it has been robustly measured for millions of external galaxies, it remains poorly constrained for the Milky Way because of the strong selection effect from our inside perspective. In this work, we reconstruct the intrinsic vertical mass density profile in the solar neighborhood and the radial mass density profile across the entire Galaxy using data from the Gaia and APOGEE surveys, following careful correction for the selection function. The local density profile exhibits strong north-south asymmetry in the geometric thick disk regime and increases steeply toward the disk mid-plane, favoring an exponential model over the sech model. Integrating the local vertical density profile yields a surface stellar mass density of 31.5632.813(syst.)0.024(stoch.)~, of which 25.074 and 6.489~${\rm…
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