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We measure the Suns velocity with respect to the Galactic halo using Gaia Early Data Release 3 (EDR3) observations of stellar streams. Our method relies on the fact that, in low-mass streams, the proper motion of stars should be directed along the stream structure in a non-rotating rest frame of the Galaxy, but the observed deviation arises due to the Suns own reflex motion. This principle allows us to implement a simple geometrical procedure, which we use to analyse 17 streams over a $sim 3-30$ kpc range. Our constraint on the Suns motion is independent of any Galactic potential model, and it is also uncorrelated with the Suns galactocentric distance. We infer the Suns velocity as $V_{R,odot}=8.88^{+1.20}_{-1.22},rm{kms^{-1}}$ (radially towards the Galactic centre), $V_{phi,odot}=241.91^{+1.61}_{-1.73},rm{kms^{-1}}$ (in the direction of Galactic rotation) and $V_{z,odot}=3.08^{+1.06}_{-1.10},rm{kms^{-1}}$ (vertically upwards), in global agreement with past measurements through other techniques; although we do note a small but significant difference in the $V_{z,odot}$ component. Some of these parameters show significant correlation and we provide our MCMC output so it can be used by the reader as an input to future works. The comparison between our Suns velocity inference and previous results, using other reference frames, indicates that the inner Galaxy is not moving with respect to the inertial frame defined by the halo streams.
We present a cross-calibration of Hipparcos and Gaia EDR3 intended to identify astrometrically accelerating stars and to fit orbits to stars with faint, massive companions. The resulting catalog, the EDR3 edition of the Hipparcos-Gaia Catalog of Acce
We present maps of the stellar streams detected in the Gaia Data Release 2 (DR2) and Early Data Release 3 (EDR3) catalogs using the STREAMFINDER algorithm. We also report the spectroscopic follow-up of the brighter DR2 stream members obtained with th
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Using the recent GAIA eDR3 catalogue we construct a sample of solar neighbourhood isolated wide binaries satisfying a series of strict signal-to-noise data cuts, exclusion of random association criteria and detailed colour-magnitude diagram selection
The Bajamar Star is an early O star that ionizes the North America/Pelican Nebulae. In projection, it is near the geometric center of the H II region, but appears to lie outside any of the main stellar subgroups. Furthermore, in Gaia DR2, there were