Abstract

We describe a major survey of the Milky Way halo designed to test for kinematic substructure caused by destruction of accreted satellites. We use the Washington photometric system to identify halo stars efficiently for spectroscopic followup. Tracers include halo giants (detectable out to more than 100 kpc), blue horizontal branch stars, halo stars near the main sequence turnoff, and the ``blue metal-poor stars'' of Preston et al (1994). We demonstrate the success of our survey by showing spectra of stars we have identified in all these categories, including giants as distant as 75 kpc. We discuss the problem of identifying the most distant halo giants. In particular, extremely metal-poor halo K dwarfs are present in approximately equal numbers to the distant giants for V fainter than 18, and we show that our method will distinguish reliably between these two groups of metal-poor stars. We plan to survey 100 square degrees at high galactic latitude, and expect to increase the numbers of known halo giants, BHB stars and turnoff stars by more than an order of magnitude. In addition to the strong test that this large sample will provide for the question `was the Milky Way halo accreted from satellite galaxies?', we will improve the accuracy of mass measurements of the Milky Way beyond 50 kpc via the kinematics of the many distant giants and BHB stars we will find. We show that one of our first datasets constrains the halo density law over galactocentric radii of 5-20 kpc and z heights of 2-15 kpc. The data support a flattened power-law halo with b/a of 0.6 and exponent -3.0. More complex models with a varying axial ratio may be needed with a larger dataset.

Keywords

Milky WayPhysicsHaloAstrophysicsGalactic haloStarsAstronomyGalaxySatellite galaxyGalaxy formation and evolutionThick diskDark matter halo

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2000
Type
article
Volume
119
Issue
5
Pages
2254-2273
Citations
132
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

132
OpenAlex

Cite This

Heather Morrison, Mario Mateo, Edward W. Olszewski et al. (2000). Mapping the Galactic Halo. I. The “Spaghetti” Survey. The Astronomical Journal , 119 (5) , 2254-2273. https://doi.org/10.1086/301357

Identifiers

DOI
10.1086/301357