SIMBAD references

2007MNRAS.379.1373X - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 379, 1373-1389 (2007/August-3)

The structure of the Galactic halo: SDSS versus SuperCOSMOS.

XU Y., DENG L.C. and HU J.Y.

Abstract (from CDS):

The halo structure at high Galactic latitudes near both the north and south poles is studied using Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and SuperCOSMOS data. For the south cap halo, the archive of the SuperCOSMOS photographic photometry sky survey is used. The coincident source rate between SuperCOSMOS data in BJ band from 16.5 to 20.5 mag and SDSS data is about 92 per cent, in a common sky area in the south. While that in the RFband is about 85 per cent from 16.5 to 19.5 mag. Transformed to the SuperCOSMOS system and downgraded to the limiting magnitudes of SuperCOSMOS, the star counts in the North Galactic Cap from SDSS show up to an 16.9±6.3 per cent asymmetric ratio (defined as relative fluctuations over the rotational symmetry structure) in the BJband, and up to 13.5±6.7 per cent asymmetric ratio in the RFband. From SuperCOSMOS BJ and RF bands, the structure of the Southern Galactic hemisphere does not show the same obvious asymmetric structures as the northern sky does in both the original and downgraded SDSS star counts. An axisymmetric halo model with n = 2.8 and q = 0.7 can fit the projected number density from SuperCOSMOS fairly well, with an average error of about 9.17 per cent. By careful analysis of the difference of star counts between the downgraded SDSS northern halo data and SuperCOSMOS southern halo data, it is shown that no asymmetry can be detected in the South Galactic Cap at the accuracy of SuperCOSMOS, and the Virgo overdensity is likely a foreign component in the Galactic halo.

Abstract Copyright: 2007 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2007 RAS

Journal keyword(s): stars: statistics - Galaxy: fundamental parameters - Galaxy: halo - Galaxy: structure

Simbad objects: 7

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