The Hercules stream as seen by APOGEE-2 South
Affiliation auteurs | !!!! Error affiliation !!!! |
Titre | The Hercules stream as seen by APOGEE-2 South |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2018 |
Auteurs | Hunt JAS, Bovy J, Perez-Villegas A, Holtzman JA, Sobeck J, Chojnowski D, Santana FA, Palicio PA, Wegg C, Gerhard O, Almeida A, Bizyaev D, Fernandez-Trincado JG, Lane RR, Longa-Pena PPelope, Majewski SR, Pan K, Roman-Lopes A |
Journal | MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY |
Volume | 474 |
Pagination | 95-101 |
Date Published | FEB |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 0035-8711 |
Mots-clés | Galaxy: bulge, Galaxy: disc, Galaxy: fundamental parameters, Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics, Galaxy: structure, solar neighbourhood |
Résumé | The Hercules stream is a group of comoving stars in the solar neighbourhood, which can potentially be explained as a signature of either the outer Lindblad resonance (OLR) of a fast Galactic bar or the corotation resonance (CR) of a slower bar. In either case, the feature should be present over a large area of the disc. With the recent commissioning of the APOGEE-2 Southern spectrograph we can search for the Hercules stream at (l, b)=(270 degrees, 0), a direction in which the Hercules stream, if caused by the bar's OLR, would be strong enough to be detected using only the line-of-sight velocities. We clearly detect a narrow, Hercules-like feature in the data that can be traced from the solar neighbourhood to a distance of about 4 kpc. The detected feature matches well the line-of-sight velocity distribution from the fast-bar (OLR) model. Confronting the data with a model where the Hercules stream is caused by the CR of a slower bar leads to a poorer match, as the corotation model does not predict clearly separated modes, possibly because the slow-bar model is too hot. |
DOI | 10.1093/mnras/stx2777 |