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We present the first stellar density profile of the Milky Way bulge reaching latitude $b=0^circ$. It is derived by counting red clump stars within the colour--magnitude diagram constructed with the new PSF-fitting photometry from VISTA Variables in the Vi a Lactea (VVV) survey data. The new stellar density map covers the area between $|l|leq 10^circ$ and $|b|leq 4.5^circ$ with unprecedented accuracy, allowing to establish a direct link between the stellar kinematics from the Giraffe Inner Bulge Spectroscopic Survey (GIBS) and the stellar mass density distribution. In particular, the location of the central velocity dispersion peak from GIBS matches a high overdensity in the VVV star count map. By scaling the total luminosity function (LF) obtained from all VVV fields to the LF from Zoccali et al.(2003), we obtain the first fully empirical estimate of the mass in stars and remnants of the Galactic bulge. The Milky Way bulge stellar mass within ($|b|<9.5^circ$, $|l|<10^circ$) is $2.0pm0.3times 10^{10}M_{odot}$.
Recent observational programmes are providing a global view of the Milky Way bulge that serves as template for detailed comparison with models and extragalactic bulges. A number of surveys (i.e. VVV, GIBS, GES, ARGOS, BRAVA, APOGEE) are producing com
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
We re-analyse photometric near-infrared data in order to investigate why it is so hard to get a consensus for the shape and density law of the bulge, as seen from the literature. To solve the problem we use the Besancon Galaxy Model to provide a sche
Most of known RR Lyraes are type ab RR Lyraes (RRLab), and they are the excellent tool to map the Milky Way and its substructures. We find that 1148 RRLab stars determined by Drake et al.(2013) have been observed by spectroscopic surveys of SDSS and
We present stellar age distributions of the Milky Way (MW) bulge region using ages for $sim$6,000 high-luminosity ($log(g) < 2.0$), metal-rich ($rm [Fe/H] ge -0.5$) bulge stars observed by the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (A