The mass of the Milky Way from outer halo stars measured by DESI DR1
Gustavo E. Medina, Ting S. Li, Gwendolyn M. Eadie, Alexander H. Riley, Monica Valluri, Nabeel Rehemtulla, Jiaxin Han, Wenting Wang, Amanda Bystr\"om, Leandro Beraldo e Silva, S. E. Koposov, N. R. Sandford, R. G. Carlberg, M. Lambert, O. Y. Gnedin, A. P. Cooper

TL;DR
This paper measures the Milky Way's total mass at large radii using DESI DR1 data of halo stars, employing Bayesian inference to improve understanding of galaxy evolution and dark matter distribution.
Contribution
It introduces a hierarchical Bayesian method to estimate the Milky Way's mass using 6D phase-space data from DESI, validated with mock halos and applicable to future surveys.
Findings
Enclosed mass within 100 kpc is approximately 0.55-0.57 x 10^{12} M_sun.
Virial mass of the Galaxy is estimated at about 0.78-0.85 x 10^{12} M_sun.
Method recovers mass with high accuracy between 50-200 kpc, with some underestimation near the center.
Abstract
As a benchmark for galaxy evolution and dark matter studies, the total mass of the Milky Way is a parameter of cosmological significance, and its value at large radii from the Galactic center remains highly uncertain. Following a hierarchical Bayesian inference approach, we measure the cumulative mass of the Milky Way using full 6D phase-space information of stars from the first data release of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). We employ 330 blue horizontal-branch stars (BHBs) and 110 RR Lyrae stars (RRLs) in DESI covering Galactocentric distances in the range 50--100 kpc. Within 100 kpc from the Galactic center, we report an enclosed mass of M and M when using BHBs and RRLs, respectively. Extrapolating our mass profiles beyond the extent…
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