4.7 Article

The alignment of the second velocity moment tensor in galaxies

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 456, Issue 4, Pages 4506-4523

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stv2729

Keywords

Galaxy: halo; galaxies: haloes; galaxies: kinematics and dynamics; dark matter

Funding

  1. STFC [ST/M006948/1, ST/K000985/1, ST/H00856X/1, ST/K000373/1, ST/H002235/1, ST/N000757/1, ST/K001000/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  2. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/K000985/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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We show that provided the principal axes of the second velocity moment tensor of a stellar population are generally unequal and are oriented perpendicular to a set of orthogonal surfaces at each point, then those surfaces must be confocal quadric surfaces and the potential must be separable or Stackel. This is true under the mild assumption that the even part of the distribution function (DF) is invariant under time reversal v(i) -> -v(i) of each velocity component. In particular, if the second velocity moment tensor is everywhere exactly aligned in spherical polar coordinates, then the potential must be of separable or Stackel form (excepting degenerate cases where two or more of the semiaxes of ellipsoid are everywhere the same). The theorem also has restrictive consequences for alignment in cylindrical polar coordinates, which is used in the popular Jeans Anisotropic Models (JAM) of Cappellari. We analyse data on the radial velocities and proper motions of a sample of similar to 7300 stars in the stellar halo of the Milky Way. We provide the distributions of the tilt angles or misalignments from both the spherical polar coordinate systems. We show that in this sample the misalignment is always small (usually within 3 degrees) for Galactocentric radii between similar to 6 and similar to 11 kpc. The velocity anisotropy is very radially biased (beta approximate to 0.7), and almost invariant across the volume in our study. Finally, we construct a triaxial stellar halo in a triaxial NFW dark matter halo using a made-to-measure method. Despite the triaxiality of the potential, the velocity ellipsoid of the stellar halo is nearly spherically aligned within similar to 6 degrees for large regions of space, particularly outside the scale radius of the stellar halo. We conclude that the second velocity moment ellipsoid can be close to spherically aligned for a much wider class of potentials than the strong constraints that arise from exact alignment might suggest.

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