Abstract
We use the kinematics of ˜200 000 giant stars that lie within
˜1.5 kpc of the plane to measure the vertical profile of mass
density near the Sun. We find that the dark mass contained within the
isodensity surface of the dark halo that passes through the Sun ((6
± 0.9) × 1010 M⊙), and the
surface density within 0.9 kpc of the plane ((69 ± 10)
M⊙ pc-2) are almost independent of the
(oblate) halo's axis ratio q. If the halo is spherical, 46 per cent of
the radial force on the Sun is provided by baryons, and only 4.3 per
cent of the Galaxy's mass is baryonic. If the halo is flattened, the
baryons contribute even less strongly to the local radial force and to
the Galaxy's mass. The dark matter density at the location of the Sun is
0.0126 q-0.89 M⊙ pc-3 = 0.48
q-0.89 GeV cm-3. When combined with other
literature results we find hints for a mildly oblate dark halo with q
≃ 0.8. Our value for the dark mass within the solar radius is
larger than that predicted by cosmological dark-matter-only simulations
but in good agreement with simulations once the effects of baryonic
infall are taken into account. Our mass models consist of three
double-exponential discs, an oblate bulge and a Navarro-Frenk-White dark
matter halo, and we model the dynamics of the RAVE (RAdial Velocity
Experiment) stars in the corresponding gravitational fields by finding
distribution functions f J that depend on three action integrals.
Statistical errors are completely swamped by systematic uncertainties,
the most important of which are the distance to the stars in the
photometric and spectroscopic samples and the solar distance to the
Galactic Centre. Systematics other than the flattening of the dark halo
yield overall uncertainties ˜15 per cent.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 3133-3151 |
Journal | Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society |
Volume | 445 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1-Dec-2014 |
Keywords
- Galaxy: disc
- Galaxy: fundamental parameters
- Galaxy: halo
- Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics
- solar neighbourhood
- Galaxy: structure