Tuesday, January 15, 2013

1301.2670 (Victor P. Debattista et al.)

What's Up in the Milky Way? The Orientation of the Disc Relative to the Triaxial Halo    [PDF]

Victor P. Debattista, Rok Roskar, Monica Valluri, Thomas Quinn, Ben Moore, James Wadsley
Models of the Sagittarius Stream have consistently found that the Milky Way disc is oriented such that its symmetry axis is along the intermediate axis of the triaxial dark matter halo. We attempt to build models of disc galaxies in such an "intermediate-axis orientation". We do this with three models. In the first two cases we simply rigidly grow a disc in a triaxial halo such that the disc ends up perpendicular to the intermediate axis. We also attempt to coax a disc to form in an intermediate-axis orientation by producing a gas+dark matter triaxial system with gas angular momentum about the intermediate axis. In all cases we fail to produce systems which remain with stellar angular momentum aligned with the halo's intermediate axis. For one of these unstable simulations we show that the potential is even rounder then the models of the Milky Way potential in the region probed by the Sagittarius Stream. We conclude that the Milky Way's disc is very unlikely to be in an intermediate axis orientation. However we find that a disc can persist off one of the principal planes of the potential. We propose that the disc of the Milky Way must be tilted relative to the principal axes of the dark matter halo. Direct confirmation of this prediction would constitute a critical test of MOND.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1301.2670

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