论文标题
开普勒之星的3D半乳酸速度:缺失RV的边缘化
The 3D Galactocentric velocities of Kepler stars: marginalizing over missing RVs
论文作者
论文摘要
精确的GAIA测量位置,视差和适当的动作提供了计算银河系恒星3D位置和2D速度(即5D相位)的机会。如果可用,光谱径向速度(RV)测量值提供了完整的6D相空间信息,但是现在有很多恒星,而没有RV测量。没有RV,就无法直接计算3D恒星速度,但是可以通过在缺失的RV尺寸上边缘化3D恒星速度来推断3D恒星速度。在本文中,我们推断出笛卡尔式中心坐标(VX,VY,VZ)的开普勒场中恒星的3D速度。我们使用Gaia,Lamost和Apogee Spectroscocic Surveys可用的RV测量值直接计算所有开普勒目标的四分之一左右的速度。使用这些恒星的速度分布作为我们的先验,我们通过在RV尺寸上边缘化来推断样品剩余四分之三的速度。我们推断的VX,VY和VZ速度的中值不确定性分别约为4、18和4 km/s。我们在开普勒场中提供总计148,590颗恒星的3D速度。这些3D速度可以实现运动学年龄,银河系恒星种群研究以及其他科学研究,并使用研究良好的开普勒恒星的基准样本。尽管此处使用的方法广泛适用于整个天空的目标,但我们的先验是根据开普勒字段构建的。将此方法扩展到银河系的其他部分时,应注意使用合适的先验。
Precise Gaia measurements of positions, parallaxes, and proper motions provide an opportunity to calculate 3D positions and 2D velocities (i.e. 5D phase-space) of Milky Way stars. Where available, spectroscopic radial velocity (RV) measurements provide full 6D phase-space information, however there are now and will remain many stars without RV measurements. Without an RV it is not possible to directly calculate 3D stellar velocities, however one can infer 3D stellar velocities by marginalizing over the missing RV dimension. In this paper, we infer the 3D velocities of stars in the Kepler field in Cartesian Galactocentric coordinates (vx, vy, vz). We directly calculate velocities for around a quarter of all Kepler targets, using RV measurements available from the Gaia, LAMOST and APOGEE spectroscopic surveys. Using the velocity distributions of these stars as our prior, we infer velocities for the remaining three-quarters of the sample by marginalizing over the RV dimension. The median uncertainties on our inferred vx, vy, and vz velocities are around 4, 18, and 4 km/s, respectively. We provide 3D velocities for a total of 148,590 stars in the Kepler field. These 3D velocities could enable kinematic age-dating, Milky Way stellar population studies, and other scientific studies using the benchmark sample of well-studied Kepler stars. Although the methodology used here is broadly applicable to targets across the sky, our prior is specifically constructed from and for the Kepler field. Care should be taken to use a suitable prior when extending this method to other parts of the Galaxy.