Revisiting the Milky Way stellar long bar and the 3 kpc arm
Abstract
CONTEXT. One of the most difficult and unexplored regions of the Milky Way is the highly extincted in-plane central region within the Galactic coordinates 10 | | 30 , |b| 3 , where we have the long-bar and 3 kpc arm with intermediate-age stellar population, whose morphological properties are still unclear. AIMS. We aim to advance our knowledge of the morphology of these two components. METHODS. We examined star counts of bright M giants in WISE-4.6μ m and its distribution of distances derived from spectroscopic parallaxes with APOGEE-DR17. We also examined the distribution of distances of young OGLE-O-rich Mira variable stars, and reviewed the literature on red clump distance determination within that area. RESULTS. We corroborate the asymmetry between positive and negative longitudes in in-plane regions, thus confirming the necessity to include a long bar. We obtain an average angle between the major axis of the long bar and the line Sun-Galactic centre of α =27.4 1.5 , aligned with the triaxial bulge and a semi-major-axis length ≈ 4 kpc. The tips of the long bar are in contact with the elliptical 3 kpc arm, with the major axis again aligned with the bulge and the long bar's major axes, whose tangential lines of sight correspond to =-22 and =+27 . In the range of 50 degrees in the sky between these two longitudes, the stellar near 3 kpc arm is clearly detected at heliocentric distances around 5 kpc, and the stellar far 3 kpc arm is tentatively detected at heliocentric distances of 9-12 kpc.
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