Bibcode
López-Corredoira, M.; Hammersley, P. L.; Garzón, F.; Simonneau, E.; Mahoney, T. J.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 313, Issue 2, pp. 392-410.
Advertised on:
4
2000
Citations
54
Refereed citations
42
Description
A method based on Lucy's iterative algorithm is developed to invert the
equation of stellar statistics for the Galactic bulge and is then
applied to the K-band star counts from the Two-Micron Galactic Survey in
a number of off-plane regions (10 deg>|b|>2 deg, |l|<15 deg).
The top end of the K-band luminosity function is derived and the
morphology of the stellar density function is fitted to triaxial
ellipsoids, assuming a non-variable luminosity function within the
bulge. The results, which have already been outlined by
López-Corredoira et al., are shown in this paper with a full
explanation of the steps of the inversion: the luminosity function shows
a sharp decrease brighter than MK=-8.0mag when compared with
the disc population; the bulge fits triaxial ellipsoids with the major
axis in the Galactic plane at an angle with the line of sight to the
Galactic centre of 12 deg in the first quadrant; the axial ratios are
1:0.54:0.33, and the distance of the Sun from the centre of the triaxial
ellipsoid is 7860pc. The major-minor axial ratio of the ellipsoids is
found not to be constant, the best fit to the gradient being
Kz=(8.4+/-1.7)xexp(-t/(2000+/-920)pc), where t is the
distance along the major axis of the ellipsoid in parsecs. However, the
interpretation of this is controversial. An eccentricity of the true
density-ellipsoid gradient and a population gradient are two possible
explanations. The best fit for the stellar density, for
1300pc