A&A 442, 929-946 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053563
Disk populations from HIPPARCOS kinematic data
Discontinuities in the local velocity distribution
S. Alcobé and R. Cubarsi Dept. Matemàtica Aplicada IV,
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, 08034-Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
e-mail: rcubarsi@mat.upc.es
(Received 3 June 2005 / Accepted 26 July 2005)
Abstract
The full space motions - including radial velocities - of a stellar sample drawn from HIPPARCOS
catalogue are used to discriminate differentiated statistical behaviours
that are associated with stellar populations in the solar neighbourhood.
A sampling parameter is used to build a hierarchical
set of nested samples, where a discontinuous pattern, based in a partition introduced
by two normal distributions, scans the subsamples. Two quantities
inform whether any subsample fits properly into the discontinuous model. A
test
measures the Gaussianity of both components, and
the entropy of the mixture probability gives account of how informative the
resulting segregation is. The less informative partition is the
one with maximum population entropy, which provides most representative kinematic
parameters. Each new population merged to the cumulative subsample
produces a discontinuity in the plot entropy versus sampling parameter,
that allows to determine the number of populations contained in the whole sample.
The resulting method has been named MEMPHIS, Maximum Entropy of the Mixture Probability from HIerarchical
Segregation.
In addition to both main kinematic components, thin and thick disk,
with respective velocity dispersions

and

km s
-1,
two discrete non-Gaussian subcomponents are detected
within the thin disk. These populations are identified with early-type and young disk stars.
Moreover, a continuous old disk population is mixed with the foregoing subcomponents composing all together
the thin disk. Older thin disk stars have a velocity dispersion overlapping a wing of the
thick disk. Although they could appear like an intermediate continuous population, nested subsamples distributions
allow us to conclude that they definitively belong to the thin disk, and that
a clear discontinuity detaches thick from thin disk.
Almost the same qualitative results, but with less accuracy, are obtained whether MEMPHIS
is applied to subsamples from the Third Catalogue of Nearby Stars (CNS3).
A dynamic model according to Chandrasekhar's approximation, under particular symmetry hypotheses,
allows to interpret the results. The non-vanishing vertex deviation - lower for older stars -
of all Galactic components is suggesting that, at least, point-axial symmetry is required in order to explain
the local kinematic behaviour.
According to this model, the oldest thick disk population, with no net radial movement, can be extrapolated,
having heliocentric velocities
of

km s
-1 in rotation, and

km s
-1 in the radial direction.
Early-type stars show a worthy local singularity, nearly with no net radial motion, similarly to the oldest
thick disk stars. Older populations - half of the thin disk and the whole thick disk - share a common differential galactic
movement, suggesting a common dynamical origin for the rupture of the axial symmetry.
The relationship between the maximum stellar velocity of a sample and its average age

is discussed,
finding an approximate relation

. Local stellar populations can be
described from a Titius-Bode-like law for the radial velocity dispersion,

, so that
for natural values
x=2,3,5,8 it determines average energy levels of discrete populations, while for continuous
intervals

and

it describes the velocity-age evolution of thin and thick disk components, according to

.
Key words: stars: kinematics
-- stars: Population II
-- methods: analytical
-- Galaxy: disk
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2005