Title: The Local Galactic Escape Velocity: Bootstrap Analysis
 1The Local Galactic Escape Velocity Bootstrap 
Analysis
- Gregory Ruchti 
- Advisor Rosie Wyse 
- (Johns Hopkins University) 
- In collaboration with M. Smith, A. Helmi, M. 
 Williams, J. Navarro, K. Freeman
2Short-comings of method for finding escape 
velocity
- Our method, as described by Martin Smith in his 
 talk, assumes the sample of stellar velocities is
 representative of an underlying equilibrium
 distribution  which may not be the case
- And that the underlying stellar halo distribution 
 function is isotropic
3Short-comings of method for finding escape 
velocity
- Assumes sample of stellar velocities is 
 representative of an underlying equilibrium
 distribution  which may not be the case
- Binary Systems 
- Center-of-mass velocity has not been measured 
 accurately.
- Radial velocity from one observation may be 
 inflated by orbital motion typical amplitudes of
 30km/s (Latham et al. 2002) but may be higher
-  ltVorbgt  30 km/s X 2-2/3 X  M (M?) /P (yrs)1/3
4Short-comings of method for finding escape 
velocity
- Assumes sample of stellar velocities is 
 representative of an underlying equilibrium
 distribution  which may not be the case
- Binary systems 
- Populating the High-velocity Tail 
- Ejected stars from binary systems. 
- Hypervelocity stars ejected from super-massive BH 
 at the Galactic center
- 6 extreme velocity (vgalacto,los gt 500 km/s) 
 stars are known, plausibly on orbits consistent
 with SMBH interaction (Brown et al. 2006)
5Short-comings of method for finding escape 
velocity
- Assumes sample of stellar velocities is 
 representative of an underlying equilibrium
 distribution  which may not be the case
- Binary systems 
- Populating the High-velocity Tail 
- Hierarchical clustering and merging model 
- Continually changing velocity distribution 
-  function. 
6Short-comings of method for finding escape 
velocity
- Assumes distribution of stellar velocities is in 
 equilibrium  which may not be the case
- Binary systems 
- Populating the High-velocity Tail 
- Hierarchical clustering and merging model 
- Disruption of globular clusters to streams 
- Must be careful to reduce sensitivity to such 
 non-equilibrium velocities.
7The Bootstrap
- Performs resampling on original data set to 
 reduce sensitivity to extreme velocities.
- Allows us to evaluate the likelihood for both ve 
 and k simultaneously.
- Not possible (for samples lt 200 stars) using 
 straight likelihood method.
8The Bootstrap Analysis
- DF 
-  
-  ? kr  k  1 
- Maximize for ve and kr 
- Choice of a priori probability distributions for 
 ve and kr less clear for the bootstrap technique.
- Derived many priors to apply to analysis for 
 improved statistical analysis.
9Tests of the Bootstrap
- Random samples drawn from velocity distribution 
 function assuming
- ? ve600 km/s, kr2.0, vmin260 km/s 
- 20 star sample 
- Does not return input values for every prior. 
- Clear variation in results from different priors. 
- Confidence intervals must be studied carefully. 
10Tests of the Bootstrap
- Random samples drawn from velocity distribution 
 function assuming
- ? ve600 km/s, kr2.0, vmin260 km/s 
- 50 star sample 
- Returns assumed input values within error 
- Slight variation in confidence interval endpoints 
 from different priors.
11Tests of the Bootstrap
- Random samples drawn from velocity distribution 
 function assuming
- ? ve600 km/s, kr2.0, vmin260 km/s 
- 200 star sample 
- Returns input values. 
- Results identical for all priors 
- Choice of prior not important for large 
-  number statistics.
12Tests of the Bootstrap
- Sensitivity to kinematic streams 
- 20 of sample with constant velocity, 
-  vgalacto 300 km/s 
- Stellar samples of lt 50 stars 
- Clear shift in estimated values for original data 
 set
- However, confidence intervals still contain 
 assumed values of ve and kr
- 200 stars or more 
- Shift is negligible 
- Bootstrap good for reducing sensitivity to streams
13The RAVE Data
- Galactocentric Radial Velocities 
- Converted from Heliocentric assuming 
- vLSR  220 km/s 
- solar peculiar motion  (10.00,5.25,7.17) km/s. 
- Chose correlation function R gt 15 cut-off. 
- Chose vmin cuts of 270 km/s and 300 km/s. 
- RAVE samples 
- 25 stars, vgalacto gt 270 km/s 
- 14 stars, vgalacto gt 300 km/s
14The RAVE Data
- Most high-velocity stars only have 1 observation 
 within RAVE database.
- Follow-up observations 
- 2.3m ATT, Australia (Mary Williams and Ken 
 Freeman)
- 3.5m at Apache Point Observatory, NM (with Jon 
 Fulbright)
15APO Data
- Data obtained using single-slit echelle 
 spectrograph (spectral resolution 37,000).
- Observed 5 high-velocity stars. 
- Radial velocity measurements agreed with RAVE 
 velocities within 2.5  0.5 km/s. (Even one
 binary! Really need more than two observations.)
- Gravities were derived from spectra 
- discussed later
16Reduced Proper Motion
- RPM diagram of entire high velocity (gt 270 km/s) 
 sample.
- Isochrones from Bonatto et al. (2004) 
- Significant fraction of stars are most likely 
 halo giants.
- Good! 
- At these magnitudes and inferred metallicities, 
 stars are few kpc distant
- Need to model v_escape from non-local sample
Thin Solid (thin disk) vtan20 km/s, Z0.019, 
age2.5 Gyr Dashed (thick disk) vtan46 km/s, 
Z0.004, age10 Gyr Thick Solid (halo) vtan200 
km/s, Z0.001, age10 Gyr 
 17Reduced Proper Motion
- Red Triangles represent those stars with 
 velocities gt 300 km/s.
- Clearly these stars can be considered halo 
 giants.
- One star may be a blue horizontal branch star. 
 (shown as blue triangle.)
-  
Thin Solid (thin disk) vtan20 km/s, Z0.019, 
age2.5 Gyr Dashed (thick disk) vtan46 km/s, 
Z0.004, age10 Gyr Thick Solid (halo) vtan200 
km/s, Z0.001, age10 Gyr 
 18Reduced Proper Motion
- Stars of which APO gravities were derived are 
 shown as blue diamonds.
- Computed gravities match with being halo giants  
 consistent with RPMD
- Derived gravity consistent with the bluest star 
 being a BHB star  but uncertain
-  
Thin Solid (thin disk) vtan20 km/s, Z0.019, 
age2.5 Gyr Dashed (thick disk) vtan46 km/s, 
Z0.004, age10 Gyr Thick Solid (halo) vtan200 
km/s, Z0.001, age10 Gyr 
 19Isotropy Around Zero
- Most samples have halo anisotropic (e.g. Chiba  
 Beers 2000).
- Positive vs. Negative velocities appear to have 
 same distribution.
- However, small number statistics.
Squares Positive Velocity Diamonds Negative 
Velocity 
 20Complementary Data
- Included high-velocity stars from Nordstrom et 
 al. (2004) (10 stars)
- Magnitude-limited sample of F/G stars (like RAVE, 
 no kinematics or metallicity bias)
- Increases sample size for better statistics. 
- Has metallicity information and full space 
 motions for stars  use only line-of-sight
 velocities
21Bootstrap Results
- RAVE only 
- Vmin270 km/s (25 stars) 
- ve520 km/s, 90 conf.430,615 
- kr2.5, 90 conf.1.0,5.0 
- Vmin300 km/s (14 stars) 
- ve560 km/s, 90 conf.430,710 
- kr3.5, 90 conf.1.0,7.0 
22Bootstrap Results
- RAVE plus Nordstrom 
- Vmin270 km/s (35 stars) 
- ve550 km/s, 90 conf.450,642 
- kr3.0, 90 conf.1.0,5.0 
- Vmin300 km/s (16 stars) 
- ve550 km/s, 90 conf.450,700 
- kr3.5, 90 conf.1.0,7.2
23Concluding Remarks
- Bootstrap holds promise our sample of 
 high-velocity stars.
- Although, clearly need more data and repeat 
 observations.
24APO Data
- Gravities were derived from spectra 
- C0953535-083919, log g  1.89 
-  C1100242-024226, log g  4.5 
-  C2041305-113156, log g  1.75 
-  T4931-00266-1 , log g  1.45 
- First pass to check velocities, will follow-up to 
 get elemental abundances
25L,B of Stars
Circles 250,270) Squares 270,300) Diamonds 3
00,)