posted on 2024-07-26, 14:50authored bySarah A. Bird, Xiang-Xiang Xue, Chao Liu, Juntai Shen, Christopher FlynnChristopher Flynn, Chengqun Yang
The anisotropy parameter beta characterizes the extent to which orbits in stellar systems are predominantly radial or tangential and is likely to constrain, for the stellar halo of the Milky Way, scenarios for its formation and evolution. We have measured beta as a function of Galactocentric radius from 5 to 100 kpc for 7664 metal-poor ([Fe/H] < -1.3) halo K giants from the LAMOST catalog with line-of-sight velocities and distances, matched to proper motions from the second Gaia data release. We construct full 6D positions and velocities for the K giants to directly measure the three components of the velocity dispersion (sigma(r), sigma(theta), sigma(phi)) (in spherical coordinates). We find that the orbits in the halo are radial over our full Galactocentric distance range reaching over 100 kpc. The anisotropy remains remarkably unchanged with Galactocentric radius from approximately 5-25 kpc, with an amplitude that depends on the metallicity of the stars, dropping from beta approximate to 0.9 for -1.8 <= [Fe/H]< -1.3 (for the bulk of the stars) to beta approximate to 0.6 for the lowest metallicities ([Fe/H]< -1.8). Considering our sample as a whole, beta approximate to 0.8 and beyond 25 kpc, the orbits gradually become less radial and anisotropy decreases to beta < 0.3 past 100 kpc. Within 8 kpc, beta < 0.8. The measurement of anisotropy is affected by substructure and streams, particularly beyond a Galactocentric distance of approximately 25 kpc, where the Sagittarius stream is prominent in the data. These results are complimentary to recent analysis of simulations by Loebman et al. and of SDSS/Gaia DR1 data by Belokurov et al.
Funding
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Royal Society
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China