The Galactic Thick Disc density profile traced with RR Lyrae stars
Abstract
We used a combination of public RR Lyrae star catalogs and a Bayesian methodology to derive robust structural parameters of the inner Halo (<25 kpc) and Thick Disc of the Milky Way. RR Lyrae stars are an unequivocal tracer of old metal-poor populations, for which accurate distances and extinctions can be individually estimated and so, are a reliable independent means of tracing the population of the old high-[α/Fe] disc usually associated to the Thick Disc. In particular, the chosen RR Lyrae sample spans regions at low galactic latitude toward the anti-center direction, allowing to probe the outermost parts of the disc. Our results favour a Thick Disc with short scale height and short scale length, hz=0.65-0.05+0.09 kpc, hR=2.1-0.25+0.82 kpc, for a model in which the inner Halo has a constant flattening of q=0.90-0.03+0.05 and a power law index of n=-2.78-0.05+0.05. Similar short scales for the Thick Disc are also found when considering an inner Halo with flattening dependent on radius. We also explored a model in which the Thick Disc has a flare and, although this is only mildly constrained by our data, a flare onset in the inner 11 kpc is highly disfavoured.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.