Academic literature on the topic 'Milkyway Halo'

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Journal articles on the topic "Milkyway Halo"

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Weiss, Jake, Heidi Jo Newberg, Matthew Newby, and Travis Desell. "Fitting the Density Substructure of the Stellar Halo with MilkyWay@home." Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 238, no. 2 (September 27, 2018): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/aadb92.

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Newberg, Heidi Jo. "Determining distances to stars statistically from photometry." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 8, S289 (August 2012): 74–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s174392131202114x.

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AbstractIn determining the distances to stars within the Milky Way galaxy, one often uses photometric or spectroscopic parallaxes. In these methods, the type of each individual star is determined, and the absolute magnitude of that star type is compared with the measured apparent magnitude to determine individual distances. In this paper, we define the term statistical photometric parallax, in which statistical knowledge of the absolute magnitudes of stellar populations is used to determine the underlying density distributions of those stars. This technique has been used to determine the density distribution of the Milky Way's stellar halo and its component tidal streams, using very large samples of stars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Most recently, the volunteer computing platform MilkyWay@home has been used to find the best-fitting model parameters for the density of these halo stars.
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Newberg, Heidi Jo, Matthew Newby, Travis Desell, Malik Magdon-Ismail, Boleslaw Szymanski, and Carlos Varela. "MilkyWay@home: Harnessing volunteer computers to constrain dark matter in the Milky Way." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 9, S298 (May 2013): 98–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921313006273.

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AbstractMilkyWay@home is a volunteer computing project that allows people from every country in the world to volunteer their otherwise idle processors to Milky Way research. Currently, more than 25,000 people (150,000 since November 9, 2007) contribute about half a PetaFLOPS of computing power to our project. We currently run two types of applications: one application fits the spatial density profile of tidal streams using statistical photometric parallax, and the other application finds the N-body simulation parameters that produce tidal streams that best match the measured density profile of known tidal streams. The stream fitting application is well developed and is producing published results. The Sagittarius dwarf leading tidal tail has been fit, and the algorithm is currently running on the trailing tidal tail and bifurcated pieces. We will soon have a self-consistent model for the density of the smooth component of the stellar halo and the largest tidal streams. The N-body application has been implemented for fitting dwarf galaxy progenitor properties only, and is in the testing stages. We use an Earth-Mover Distance method to measure goodness-of-fit for density of stars along the tidal stream. We will add additional spatial dimensions as well as kinematic measures in a piecemeal fashion, with the eventual goal of fitting the orbit and parameters of the Milky Way potential (and thus the density distribution of dark matter) using multiple tidal streams.
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Mendelsohn, Eric J., Heidi Jo Newberg, Siddhartha Shelton, Lawrence M. Widrow, Jeffery M. Thompson, and Carl J. Grillmair. "Estimate of the Mass and Radial Profile of the Orphan–Chenab Stream's Dwarf-galaxy Progenitor Using MilkyWay@home." Astrophysical Journal 926, no. 2 (February 1, 2022): 106. http://dx.doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac498a.

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Abstract We fit the mass and radial profile of the Orphan–Chenab Stream’s (OCS) dwarf-galaxy progenitor by using turnoff stars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the Dark Energy Camera to constrain N-body simulations of the OCS progenitor falling into the Milky Way on the 1.5 PetaFLOPS MilkyWay@home distributed supercomputer. We infer the internal structure of the OCS’s progenitor under the assumption that it was a spherically symmetric dwarf galaxy composed of a stellar system embedded in an extended dark matter halo. We optimize the evolution time, the baryonic and dark matter scale radii, and the baryonic and dark matter masses of the progenitor using a differential evolution algorithm. The likelihood score for each set of parameters is determined by comparing the simulated tidal stream to the angular distribution of OCS stars observed in the sky. We fit the total mass of the OCS’s progenitor to (2.0 ± 0.3) × 107 M ⊙ with a mass-to-light ratio of γ = 73.5 ± 10.6 and (1.1 ± 0.2) × 106 M ⊙ within 300 pc of its center. Within the progenitor’s half-light radius, we estimate a total mass of (4.0 ± 1.0) × 105 M ⊙. We also fit the current sky position of the progenitor’s remnant to be (α, δ) = ((166.0 ± 0.9)°, (−11.1 ± 2.5)°) and show that it is gravitationally unbound at the present time. The measured progenitor mass is on the low end of previous measurements and, if confirmed, lowers the mass range of ultrafaint dwarf galaxies. Our optimization assumes a fixed Milky Way potential, OCS orbit, and radial profile for the progenitor, ignoring the impact of the Large Magellanic Cloud.
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Reports on the topic "Milkyway Halo"

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Li, Ting. Exploring Milkyway Halo Substructures with Large-Area Sky Surveys. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1343961.

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