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Modeling Complete Distributions with Incomplete Observations: The Velocity Ellipsoid from Hipparcos Data

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© 2005. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation David W. Hogg et al 2005 ApJ 629 268 DOI 10.1086/431572

0004-637X/629/1/268

Abstract

An algorithm is developed to model the three-dimensional velocity distribution function of a sample of stars using only measurements of each star's two-dimensional tangential velocity. The algorithm works with "missing data": it reconstructs the three-dimensional distribution from data (velocity measurements) that all have one dimension that is unmeasured (the radial direction). It also accounts for covariant measurement uncertainties on the tangential velocity components. The algorithm is applied to tangential velocities measured in a kinematically unbiased sample of 11,865 stars taken from the Hipparcos catalog, chosen to lie on the main sequence and have well-measured parallaxes. The local stellar velocity distribution function of each of a set of 20 color-selected subsamples is modeled as a mixture of two three-dimensional Gaussian ellipsoids of arbitrary relative responsibility. In the fitting, one Gaussian (the "halo") is fixed at the known mean velocity and velocity variance tensor of the Galaxy halo, and the other (the "disk") is allowed to take an arbitrary mean and an arbitrary variance tensor. The mean and variance tensors (commonly known as the "velocity ellipsoid") of the disk velocity distribution are both found to be strong functions of stellar color, with long-lived populations showing larger velocity dispersion, slower mean rotation velocity, and smaller vertex deviation than short-lived populations. The local standard of rest (LSR) is inferred in the usual way, and the Sun's motion relative to the LSR is found to be (U, V, W) = (10.1, 4.0, 6.7) ± (0.5, 0.8, 0.2) km s-1. Artificial data sets are made and analyzed, with the same error properties as the Hipparcos data, to demonstrate that the analysis is unbiased. The results are shown to be insensitive to the assumption that the velocity distributions are Gaussian.

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10.1086/431572