Litcius/Paper detail

The Milky Way bar pattern speed using Hercules and <i>Gaia</i> DR3

Scott Lucchini, Elena D’Onghia, J. A. L. Aguerri

2024Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT The distribution of moving groups in the solar neighbourhood has been used to constrain dynamical properties of the Milky Way for decades. The kinematic bimodality between the main mode (Hyades, Pleiades, Coma Berenices, and Sirius) and Hercules can be explained by two different bar models – via the outer Lindblad resonance of a bar with a high pattern speed (∼55 km s−1 kpc−1), or via the corotation resonance of a bar with a low pattern speed (∼40 km s−1 kpc−1). Recent works directly studying the kinematics of bar stars and gas flows near the centre of the Galaxy have converged on the low pattern speed model. In this paper, we independently confirm this result by using Gaia DR3 to directly study the variation of Hercules across Galactic azimuth. We find that Hercules increases in Vϕ and becomes stronger as we move towards the minor axis of the bar, and decreases in Vϕ and becomes weaker as we move towards the major axis of the bar. This is in direct agreement with theoretical predictions of a low pattern speed bar model in which Hercules is formed by the corotation resonance with stars orbiting the bar’s L4/L5 Lagrange points.

Topics & Concepts

Milky WayBar (unit)AstronomyPhysicsAstrophysicsAstrobiologyMeteorologyStarsAstronomical Observations and InstrumentationSpace Technology and ApplicationsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae