The long Galactic bar as seen by UKIDSS Galactic plane survey

Cabrera-Lavers, A.; González-Fernández, C.; Garzón, F.; Hammersley, P. L.; López-Corredoira, M.
Bibliographical reference

Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 491, Issue 3, 2008, pp.781-787

Advertised on:
12
2008
Number of authors
5
IAC number of authors
5
Citations
92
Refereed citations
82
Description
Context: Over the past decade there have been a series of results supporting the hypothesis of the existence of a long thin bar in the Milky Way with a half-length of 4.5 kpc and a position angle of around 45°. This is apparently a very different structure from the triaxial bulge of the Galaxy, which is thicker and shorter and dominates the star counts at |l|<10°. Aims: In this paper, we analyse the stellar distribution in the inner Galaxy to see if there is clear evidence for two triaxial or bar-like structures in the Milky Way. Methods: By using the red-clump population as a tracer of Galactic structure, we determine the apparent morphology of the inner Galaxy. Deeper and higher spatial-resolution near infrared photometry from the UKIDSS Galactic plane survey allows us to use in-plane data even at the innermost Galactic longitudes, a region where the source confusion is a dominant effect that makes it impossible to use other databases, such as 2MASS or TCS-CAIN. Results: We show that results previously obtained with the red-clump giants are confirmed with the in-plane data from UKIDSS GPS. There are two different structures coexisting in the inner Galactic plane: one with a position angle of 23.6- ° ± 2.19 ° that can be traced from the Galactic centre up to ~10° (the Galactic bulge), and other with a larger position angle of 42.44 ° ± 2.14 °, that ends around l=28° (the long Galactic bar).
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