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The narrow GD-1 stream of stars, spanning 60 deg on the sky at a distance of ~10 kpc from the Sun and ~15 kpc from the Galactic center, is presumed to be debris from a tidally disrupted star cluster that traces out a test-particle orbit in the Milky Way halo. We combine SDSS photometry, USNO-B astrometry, and SDSS and Calar Alto spectroscopy to construct a complete, empirical 6-dimensional phase-space map of the stream. We find that an eccentric orbit in a flattened isothermal potential describes this phase-space map well. Even after marginalizing over the stream orbital parameters and the distance from the Sun to the Galactic center, the orbital fit to GD-1 places strong constraints on the circular velocity at the Suns radius V_c=224 pm 13 km/s and total potential flattening q_Phi=0.87^{+0.07}_{-0.04}. When we drop any informative priors on V_c the GD-1 constraint becomes V_c=221 pm 18 km/s. Our 6-D map of GD-1 therefore yields the best current constraint on V_c and the only strong constraint on q_Phi at Galactocentric radii near R~15 kpc. Much, if not all, of the total potential flattening may be attributed to the mass in the stellar disk, so the GD-1 constraints on the flattening of the halo itself are weak: q_{Phi,halo}>0.89 at 90% confidence. The greatest uncertainty in the 6-D map and the orbital analysis stems from the photometric distances, which will be obviated by Gaia.
We present the first detailed observational picture of a possible ongoing massive cluster hierarchical assembly in the Galactic disk as revealed by the analysis of the stellar full phase-space (3D positions and kinematics and spectro-photometric prop
The detailed study of the Galactic bulge stellar population necessarily requires an accurate representation of the interstellar extinction particularly toward the Galactic plane and center, where the severe and differential reddening is expected to v
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