The Outer spiral arm of the Milky Way using Red Clump stars [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2210.08206


Aims: Our aim is to provide an observational view of the old Disk structure of the Milky Way galaxy using the distribution of red clump stars. The spiral arms, warp structure, and other asymmetries present in the Disk are re-visited using a systematic study of red clump star counts over the disk of the Galaxy.
Methods: We developed a method to systematically extract the red clump stars from 2MASS ($J-K_s, ~J$) colour-magnitude diagram of $1^\circ \times 1^\circ$ bins in $\ell \times b$ covering the range $40^\circ \le \ell \le 320^\circ$ and $-10^\circ \le b \le 10^\circ$. 2MASS data continues to be important since it is able to identify and trace the red clump stars to much farther distances than any optical survey of the Disk. The foreground star contamination in the selected sample is removed by utilising the accurate astrometric data from Gaia EDR3 and astrophysical parameters from Gaia DR3.
Results: We have generated a face-on-view (XY-plane) of the Galaxy depicting the density distribution and count ratio above and below the Galactic plane. The resulting overdensity of red clump stars traces the continuous morphology of the Outer arm from the second to the third Galactic quadrant. This is the first study to map the Outer arms across the disk using red clump stars. Through this study, we are able to trace the Outer arm well into the 3rd Galactic quadrant for the first time. Apart from the spiral structures, we also see a wave-like asymmetry above and below the Galactic plane with respect to longitudes, indicating a warp structure. The warp structure is studied systematically by tracing the ratio of red clump stars above and below the Galactic plane. We provide the first direct observational evidence of the asymmetry in the Outer spiral arms confirming that the spiral arms traced by the older population are also warped similar to the Disk.

Read this paper on arXiv…

N. Uppal, S. Ganesh and M. Schultheis
Tue, 18 Oct 22
82/99

Comments: 7 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to ‘Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters’