The flare and spiral structure of the Milky Way's disc as traced by young giant stars
E. Poggio, R. Drimmel, S. Khanna, R. Andrae, M. G. Lattanzi
TLDR
This paper maps the Milky Way's disc structure and spiral arms using young giant stars, revealing its flare and extended arm segments.
Key contributions
- Maps the 3D structure of the Galactic disc using ~16000 young giant stars out to 8 kpc.
- Identifies a prominent Galactic flare, with the disc thickening exponentially towards the outer Galaxy.
- Traces coherent spiral arm segments, extending previous maps based on UMS and OB stars by 2-4 kpc.
- Reveals the Perseus Arm's gentle curvature and a 10 kpc Local/Orion arm, plus a new Scutum Arm segment.
Why it matters
This research significantly extends our understanding of the Milky Way's large-scale structure, providing a more detailed map of its spiral arms and disc flare. It improves upon previous studies by using a larger sample and accounting for biases, offering crucial insights into galactic evolution.
Original Abstract
We explore the three-dimensional structure of a sample of $\sim$ 16000 young giant stars in the Galactic disc out to $\sim$8 kpc in heliocentric distance. This population traces a thin disc with a local vertical scale height of $h_{Z \odot} = 77 \pm 4$ pc, that progressively thickens toward the outer Galaxy with a prominent Galactic flare, rising exponentially with a radial scale length of $h_{fl} = 3.5 \pm 0.3 \, \rm{kpc}$. Our analysis incorporates both the survey selection function and the vertical displacements caused by the Galactic warp and corrugations, which, if neglected, would lead to significant biases in the derived disc scale height. In the Galactic plane, the young giants trace coherent spiral arm segments, extending previous maps based on upper main sequence (UMS) and OB stars by 2-4 kpc depending on the considered direction. The obtained map supports a pitch angle of roughly 20 degrees for the Perseus Arm, and shows that the Local/Orion arm stretches at least 10 kpc in length. Unlike earlier and more local maps based on UMS and OB stars, where the relatively small sampled portion of the Perseus Arm appeared as a short, nearly straight feature, our map reveals it as an extended structure with a gentle curvature, as expected for spiral arms on large scales. In the inner Galaxy, we also identify a new segment likely associated with the Scutum Arm, clearly detached from the Sagittarius-Carina Arm in the fourth Galactic quadrant.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.