论文标题
银河系的条形结构特性来自重力波
The Milky Way's bar structural properties from gravitational waves
论文作者
论文摘要
激光干涉仪空间天线(LISA)将通过在整个银河系中单独解决$> 10^4 $信号来实现银河重力波(GW)天文学。在这项工作中,我们首次评估了丽莎数据绘制银河恒星棒和螺旋臂的潜力,因为与凸出区域的光学观察不同,GWS不受恒星拥挤和尘埃灭绝的影响。为了实现这一目标,我们将现实的银河DWD和高分辨率N体模拟的人群结合在一起,与银河系相吻合。然后,我们对合成DWD种群的GW信号进行建模,并从模拟Lisa观测值重建模拟星系的结构。我们的结果表明,虽然背景盘和螺旋臂之间的低信号对比会阻碍我们表征螺旋结构的能力,但恒星棒显然会出现在凸起的GW地图中。从这些合成观测值中得出的条形长度和条形宽度分别被低估了,分别在$1σ$和大于2σ$的级别内,但所得的轴比同意在$1σ$之内,而视角则在一个程度内恢复到一个程度。与电磁示踪剂相比,这些是竞争性的限制,它们是通过完全独立的方法获得的。因此,我们预见到,GWS和电磁示踪剂的协同使用将是绘制钢筋和银河系凸起的有力策略。
The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) will enable Galactic gravitational wave (GW) astronomy by individually resolving $ > 10^4$ signals from double white dwarf (DWD) binaries throughout the Milky Way. In this work we assess for the first time the potential of LISA data to map the Galactic stellar bar and spiral arms, since GWs are unaffected by stellar crowding and dust extinction unlike optical observations of the bulge region. To achieve this goal we combine a realistic population of Galactic DWDs with a high-resolution N-Body simulation a galaxy in good agreement with the Milky Way. We then model GW signals from our synthetic DWD population and reconstruct the structure of the simulated Galaxy from mock LISA observations. Our results show that while the low signal contrast between the background disc and the spiral arms hampers our ability to characterise the spiral structure, the stellar bar will instead clearly appear in the GW map of the bulge. The bar length and bar width derived from these synthetic observations are underestimated, respectively within $1σ$ and at a level greater than $2σ$, but the resulting axis ratio agrees to well within $1σ$, while the viewing angle is recovered to within one degree. These are competitive constraints compared to those from electromagnetic tracers, and they are obtained with a completely independent method. We therefore foresee that the synergistic use of GWs and electromagnetic tracers will be a powerful strategy to map the bar and the bulge of the Milky Way.