Gaia Early Data Release 3: Acceleration of the Solar System from Gaia astrometry

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Gaia Collaboration - (Author)

Abstract

Context. Gaia Early Data Release 3 (Gaia EDR3) provides accurate astrometry for about 1.6 million compact (QSO-like) extragalactic sources, 1.2 million of which have the best-quality five-parameter astrometric solutions. Aims. The proper motions of QSO-like sources are used to reveal a systematic pattern due to the acceleration of the solar systembarycentre with respect to the rest frame of the Universe. Apart from being an important scientific result by itself, the acceleration measured in this way is a good quality indicator of the Gaia astrometric solution. Methods. Theeffect of the acceleration was obtained as a part of the general expansion of the vector field of proper motions in vector spherical harmonics (VSH). Various versions of the VSH fit and various subsets of the sources were tried and compared to get the most consistent result and a realistic estimate of its uncertainty. Additional tests with the Gaia astrometric solution were used to get a better idea of the possible systematic errors in the estimate. Results. Our best estimate of the acceleration based on Gaia EDR3 is (2.32 ± 0.16) × 10-10 m s-2 (or 7.33 ±0.51 km s-1 Myr-1) towards α = 269.1° ± 5.4°, δ = -31.6° ± 4.1°, corresponding to a proper motion amplitude of 5.05 ±0.35 μas yr-1. This is in good agreement with the acceleration expected from current models of the Galactic gravitational potential. We expect that future Gaia data releases will provide estimates of the acceleration with uncertainties substantially below 0.1 μas yr-1.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA9
Number of pages19
JournalAstronomy & astrophysics
Volume649
Publication statusPublished - 28 Apr 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85104986773
ORCID /0000-0001-6967-8707/work/141544833
ORCID /0000-0002-9533-2168/work/168205382
ORCID /0000-0003-4682-7831/work/168206596

Keywords

Keywords

  • Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics, Proper motions, Methods: data analysis, Reference systems, Astrometry