Fitting orbits to tidal streams with proper motions

The Galaxy's stellar halo seems to be a tangle of disrupted systems that have been tidally stretched out into streams. Each stream approximately delineates an orbit in the Galactic force-field. In the first paper in this series we showed that all six phase-space coordinates of each point on an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eyre, A, Binney, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2009
Description
Summary:The Galaxy's stellar halo seems to be a tangle of disrupted systems that have been tidally stretched out into streams. Each stream approximately delineates an orbit in the Galactic force-field. In the first paper in this series we showed that all six phase-space coordinates of each point on an orbit can be reconstructed from the orbit's path across the sky and measurements of the line-of-sight velocity along the orbit. In this paper we complement this finding by showing that the orbit can also be reconstructed if we know proper motions along the orbit rather than the radial velocities. We also show that accurate proper motions of stream stars would enable distances to be determined to points on the stream that are independent of any assumption about the Galaxy's gravitational potential. Such "Galactic parallaxes" would be as fundamental as conventional trigonometric parallaxes, but measureable to distances ~70 times further.