Kinematic hints of a nuclear bar in the Milky Way
Karl Fiteni, Mattia C. Sormani, Victor P. Debattista, Francisco Nogueras-Lara, Rainer Sch\"odel, Jason L. Sanders, Mathias Schultheis, Xingchen Li, Arianna Vasini, Zi-Xuan Feng, Marco Donati

TL;DR
This study provides the first kinematic evidence suggesting the presence of a nuclear bar in the Milky Way, based on velocity diagnostics from combined stellar motion data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel kinematic analysis combining line-of-sight velocities and proper motions to detect a nuclear bar in our galaxy.
Findings
Significant negative vertex deviation indicating non-axisymmetry.
Stronger signal in the innermost regions consistent with a nuclear bar.
Velocity dispersion orientation opposite to large-scale bar patterns.
Abstract
The Milky Way hosts a flattened nuclear stellar disc (NSD) that dominates the gravitational potential in the inner few hundred parsecs. Whether the NSD is purely axisymmetric or contains a nuclear bar remains an open question. We test for the presence of a nuclear bar using kinematic diagnostics by combining line-of-sight velocities from the KMOS NSD survey with proper motions from VIRAC2 to construct the velocity ellipse. After applying strict quality cuts to minimise contamination from large-scale bar stars, we measure the vertex deviation and anisotropy for several subsamples. For our primary sample (, , ), we find a significant negative vertex deviation with moderate anisotropy . A…
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