1. The Milky Way Tomography with SDSS. III. Stellar Kinematics
- Author
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Bond, Nicholas A., Ivezic, Zeljko, Sesar, Branimir, Juric, Mario, Munn, Jeffrey A., Kowalski, Adam, Loebman, Sarah, Roskar, Rok, Beers, Timothy C., Dalcanton, Julianne, Rockosi, Constance M., Yanny, Brian, Newberg, Heidi J., Allende Prieto, Carlos, Wilhelm, Ron, Lee, Young Sun, Sivarani, Thirupathi, Majewski, Steven R., Norris, John E., Bailer-Jones, Coryn A. L., Fiorentin, Paola Re, Schlegel, David, Uomoto, Alan, Lupton, Robert H., Knapp, Gillian R., Gunn, James E., Covey, Kevin R., Smith, J. Allyn, Miknaitis, Gajus, Doi, Mamoru, Tanaka, Masayuki, Fukugita, Masataka, Kent, Steve, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Quinn, Tom R., Hawley, Suzanne, Anderson, Scott, Kiuchi, Furea, Chen, Alex, Bushong, James, Sohi, Harkirat, Haggard, Daryl, Kimball, Amy, McGurk, Rosalie, Barentine, John, Brewington, Howard, Harvanek, Mike, Kleinman, Scott, Krzesinski, Jurek, Long, Dan, Nitta, Atsuko, Snedden, Stephanie, Lee, Brian, Pier, Jeffrey R., Harris, Hugh, Brinkmann, Jonathan, and Schneider, Donald P.
- Subjects
Galaxy: disk ,Galaxy: halo ,Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics ,Galaxy: stellar content ,Galaxy: structure ,methods: data analysis ,stars: statistics - Abstract
We study Milky Way kinematics using a sample of 18.8 million main-sequence stars with r < 20 and proper-motion measurements derived from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and POSS astrometry, including ~170,000 stars with radial-velocity measurements from the SDSS spectroscopic survey. Distances to stars are determined using a photometric-parallax relation, covering a distance range from ~100 pc to 10 kpc over a quarter of the sky at high Galactic latitudes (|b|>20°). We find that in the region defined by 1 kpc
- Published
- 2010
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