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Mass to light ratio of the Milky Way disc Chris Flynn, Johan Holmberg, Laura Portinari Tuorla Observatory Burkhard Fuchs, Hartmut Jahreiß Astronomisches Rechen-Inst, Heidelberg Local mass and local light Surface density and volume density of mass and light First measure the mass Measure vertical velocities for a few hundred tracer stars near the Sun. Measure their vertical density distribution. Combining these leads to an estimate of the Galactic vertical gravitational potential and the surface and volume mass density Results Creze et al (1989) Kuijken and Gilmore (1989) ~ 50 M/ pc² = 46 +/- 9 M/ pc² Bahcall, Flynn and Gould (1992) = 80 +/- 20 M/ pc² Flynn and Fuchs (1994) = 50 +/- 10 M/ pc² Hipparcos and HST In the 1990s: Hipparcos provided superb parallaxes... ... and ... HST nailed down the number of faint stars in the Galaxy Holmberg and Flynn (2004) = 56 +/- 6 M/ pc² --- using A stars, F stars, K giants. Mass model of disc The total local disc mass is measured via dynamics... ... and can be compared to the total amount of visible mass. Result: The two agree. No significant evidence for missing disc matter. Disc surface density Contributors to the surface density of matter Roughly : 1/3 gas; 1/3 red dwarfs; 1/3 other stars Luminosity of the disc Next step: How much light is generated by the stellar components? The sources of nearby V band light Nearby V luminosity is mainly due to main sequence (MS), with a healthy contribution by red giants (RG) Going up We now integrate the luminosity sources vertically (via the disc mass model and/or velocity dispersions locally) to obtain surface luminosities Giants have a higher scale height than turn-off stars, and contribute much more to the surface luminosity Rise of the giants B band V band I band Shift from main sequence to giant dominance of luminosity budget Luminosity results band volume luminosity surface luminosity B 0.074 L/pc3 26 L/pc2 V 0.056 L/pc3 24 L/pc2 I 0.063 L/pc3 30 L/pc2 Now, for the stellar component, we have a mass surface density of 36 M/pc2 ... and ... a local mass density of 0.042 M/pc3 ... Mass-to-light : the results band volume M/L M/L surface M/L M/L B 0.6 +/- 0.1 1.4 +/- 0.2 V 0.8 +/- 0.1 1.5 +/- 0.2 I 0.7 +/- 0.1 1.2 +/- 0.2 Surface M/L of stars is “one and a bit”! Including the gas, M/L is ~ 2 Boldly go... We can extrapolate from the Solar Neighbourhood and compute the disc mass and luminosity... Turns out to be amazingly insensitive to the disc's scalelength... (Sommer-Larsen and Dolgov, 2001) Disc I band luminosity ~ 3×1010 L How many stars? There are ~70 stars per square parsec near the Sun Stars per square parsec Main Sequence Giants How many in the Galaxy? Rough total is 65 billion stars (including 30% for binaries) so... 100 billion stars altogether in the disk, bulge and halo White dwarfs Red dwarfs Sun-like Milky Way seen from afar Surface brightness fluctuations are a distance measurement technique What does the stellar mix in the solar column look like from a distance? Solar neighbourhood is quite blue Still, the SBF fluctuation magnitude for local column fits well Local disk of Milky Way lies here Mieske et al 2007 Dunn 2007 (priv. comm.) Milky Way compared to External discs Where does the Milky Way lie on the Tully-Fisher relation? Pretty much within the (1-sigma) scatter. It's a bit under-luminous for its rotation rate Copernicus wouldn't mind too much, presumably. Visible baryons are well understood mass and light slot nicely together in the local disc the disc of the galaxy fits well to galaxy evolution models models should reliable for a range of purposes Portinari et al 2006 Missing baryons baryons account for 4% of the cosmic energy budget (25% is in both types of matter) much of the baryons should be in associated with galaxies but the visible baryons in the galaxy only add up to 0.5% (factor of almost 10 too small!) where are these local baryons? Driver et al , 2007 Baryonic mass fraction Galaxy clusters Baryons in structures versus dynamical speed red line is LambdaCDM expectation Very little scatter in the observed relation McGaugh 2007 Milky Way Baryons in red halos stacked SDSS 1047 edge-on galaxies seen around blue compact galaxies, other types too very red colour is difficult to fit to ordinary stellar pops if composed of red dwarfs, they could represent a lot of newly found baryons density profile and M/L poorly understood Bergvall et al 2006 Zibetti et al 2004 No red star excess near us does the Milky Way have a “red halo”? red dwarfs account for over half the nearby mass, but emit little light star counts with Hipparcos/Tycho/HST were used, and rule out a red star excess near the Sun Casagrande/Gardner working on new, huge M dwarf sample Summary Disc M/L is well constrained by Hipparcos/HST. M/LB,V,I = '1 and a bit'. Next comes infra-red (J, H, K) from 2MASS. Work in progress. Galactic chemical evolutionary models of Solar neighbourhood fit the data very well. Models gain street credit! Are there still at least as many baryons to be found in the Milky Way?