论文标题
使用相空间螺旋iv称重银河盘。三维星系模拟的测试
Weighing the Galactic disk using phase-space spirals IV. Tests on a three-dimensional galaxy simulation
论文作者
论文摘要
在第四篇有关使用相空间螺旋形状称重银河盘的第四篇文章中,我们在十亿个粒子的三维N体模拟上测试了我们的方法,该方法由宿主星系和合并矮人卫星等银河系组成。这项工作的主要目的是测试我们模型的基本假设的有效性,即螺旋居住在局部静态和垂直分离的引力电位。这些假设可能会在受干扰的三维磁盘银河系的复杂运动学系统中受到损害。实际上,预计该模拟的统计不确定性和与这些假设相关的任何潜在偏见都将被放大,该模拟与银河系的不同之处在于它更加强烈,并且具有更高垂直能量的相位空间螺旋形。我们从模拟主机银河系中的不同空间位置构建了44个单独的数据样本。我们的方法为这44个数据样本的垂直重力潜力产生了准确的结果,其误差分布为7%,误差分布分布。我们还在严重且未知的空间依赖选择效果下测试了我们的方法,还具有强大的结果。这将其与基于稳态假设的传统动力质量测量区分开来,这些测量值对未知或建模不完全的不完整非常敏感。因此,我们将能够在银河系磁盘中对遥远区域进行局部质量测量,否则该磁盘将受到复杂且知之甚少的选择效应的损害。
In this fourth article on weighing the Galactic disk using the shape of the phase-space spiral, we have tested our method on a billion particle three-dimensional N-body simulation, comprised of a Milky Way like host galaxy and a merging dwarf satellite. The main purpose of this work was to test the validity of our model's fundamental assumptions that the spiral inhabits a locally static and vertically separable gravitational potential. These assumptions might be compromised in the complex kinematic system of a disturbed three-dimensional disk galaxy; in fact, the statistical uncertainty and any potential biases related to these assumptions are expected to be amplified for this simulation, which differs from the Milky Way in that it is more strongly perturbed and has a phase-space spiral that inhabits higher vertical energies. We constructed 44 separate data samples from different spatial locations in the simulated host galaxy. Our method produced accurate results for the vertical gravitational potential of these 44 data samples, with an unbiased distribution of errors with a standard deviation of 7 %. We also tested our method under severe and unknown spatially dependent selection effects, also with robust results; this sets it apart from traditional dynamical mass measurements that are based on the assumption of a steady state and which are highly sensitive to unknown or poorly modelled incompleteness. Hence, we will be able to make localised mass measurements of distant regions in the Milky Way disk, which would otherwise be compromised by complex and poorly understood selection effects.