SIMBAD references

2020ApJ...895L..49P - Astrophys. J., 895, L49-L49 (2020/June-1)

A data-driven technique Using millisecond transients to measure the Milky Way halo.

PLATTS E., PROCHASKA J.X. and LAW C.J.

Abstract (from CDS):

We introduce a new technique to constrain the line-of-sight integrated electron density of our Galactic halo DMMW,halo through analysis of the observed dispersion measure distributions of pulsars DMpulsar and fast radio bursts (FRBs) DMFRB. We model these distributions, correcting for the Galactic interstellar medium, with kernel density estimation-well-suited to the small data regime-to find lower/upper bounds to the corrected DMpulsar/DMFRB distributions: {max}[DMpulsar]~7±2(stat)±9(sys)pccm–3 and {min}[DMFRB]~63–21+27(stat)±9(sys)pccm–3. Using bootstrap resampling to estimate uncertainties, we set conservative limits on the Galactic halo dispersion measure -2< DMMW,halo< 123pccm–3 (95% c.l.). The upper limit is especially conservative because it may include a nonnegligible contribution from the FRB host galaxies and a nonzero contribution from the cosmic web. It strongly disfavors models where the Galaxy has retained the majority of its baryons with a density profile tracking the presumed dark matter density profile. Last, we perform Monte Carlo simulations of larger FRB samples to validate our technique and assess the sensitivity of ongoing and future surveys. We recover bounds of several tens of pccm–3 that may be sufficient to test whether the Galaxy has retained a majority of its baryonic mass. We estimate that a sample of several thousand FRBs will significantly tighten constraints on DMMW,halo and offer a valuable complement to other analyses.

Abstract Copyright: © 2020. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): Radio transient sources - Circumgalactic medium - Astrostatistics techniques

Simbad objects: 6

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2020ApJ...895L..49P and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu