American Astronomical Society Quick Search:Help  
The Astrophysical Journal
Athens/Institutional login
IOP login: Password:   
Create account | Alerts | Contact us
IOP Publishing | AAS Homepage | ApJ Homepage | This Journal | Search | Authors | Referees | Librarians | User Options | Help |

Probing the Shape of the Galactic Halo with Hypervelocity Stars

Oleg Y. Gnedin et al 2005 ApJ 634 344-350   doi: 10.1086/496958  Help

   PDF (925 KB) | HTML | References | Articles citing this article

Oleg Y. Gnedin1, Andrew Gould1, Jordi Miralda-Escudé1 and Andrew R. Zentner2
1 Department of Astronomy, Ohio State University, 140 West 18th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210
2 Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics and Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637
E-mail: ognedin@astronomy.ohio-state.edu

ABSTRACT. Precise proper-motion measurements (σμ ~ 10 μas yr-1) of the recently discovered hypervelocity star (HVS) SDSS J090745.0+024507 would yield significant constraints on the axis ratios and orientation of a triaxial model for the Galactic halo. Triaxiality of dark matter halos is predicted by cold dark matter models of galaxy formation and may be used to probe the nature of dark matter. However, unless the distance to this star is determined to better than 10%, these constraints suffer from one-dimensional degeneracies, which we quantify. We show how proper-motion measurements of several HVSs could simultaneously resolve the distance degeneracies of all such stars and produce a detailed picture of the triaxial halo. Additional HVSs may be found from radial velocity surveys or from parallax/proper-motion data derived from Gaia. High-precision proper-motion measurements of these stars using the Space Interferometry Mission (SIM PlanetQuest) would substantially tighten the constraints they yield on the Galactic potential.

Subject headings: cosmology: theory; dark matter; galaxies: formation; galaxies: halos; Galaxy: halo

Print publication: Issue 1 (2005 November 20)
Received 2005 June 30, accepted for publication 2005 August 4

Bookmark and Share Post to CiteUlike | Post to Connotea | Post to Bibsonomy

 

Find related articles





Article options

Authors & Referees

IOP Journal Archiveauthor services
 
Content finder
  Full Search
  Help


  
Setup information is available for Adobe Acrobat.
EndNote, ProCite ® and Reference Manager ® are registered trademarks of ISI Researchsoft.
Copyright © Institute of Physics and IOP Publishing Limited 2009 - electronic design and all rights in the EJs software.
© The American Astronomical Society ("AAS") - the names of any journals published by AAS and the content of all such journals.
Use of this service is subject to compliance with the terms and conditions of use. In particular, reselling and systematic downloading of files is prohibited.
Help: Cookies | Data Protection.