A galactic halo is an extended, roughly spherical component of a galaxy which extends beyond the main, visible component. Several distinct components of a galaxy comprise its halo:
The distinction between the halo and the main body of the galaxy is clearest in spiral galaxies, where the spherical shape of the halo contrasts with the flat disc. In an elliptical galaxy, there is no sharp transition between the other components of the galaxy and the halo.
A halo can be studied by observing its effect on the passage of light from distant bright objects like that are in line of sight beyond the galaxy in question.
The Milky Way stellar halo contains globular clusters, RR Lyrae stars with low metallicity, and . In our stellar halo, stars tend to be old (most are greater than 12 billion years old) and metal-poor, but there are also halo star clusters with observed metal content similar to . The halo stars of the Milky Way have an observed radial velocity dispersion of about 200 kilometres per second and a low average velocity of rotation of about . Star formation in the stellar halo of the Milky Way ceased long ago.
The Navarro–Frenk–White profile is a widely accepted density profile of the dark matter halo determined through numerical simulations. It represents the mass density of the dark matter halo as a function of , the distance from the galactic center:
where is a characteristic radius for the model, is the critical density (with being the Hubble constant), and is a dimensionless constant. The invisible halo component cannot extend with this density profile indefinitely, however; this would lead to a diverging integral when calculating mass. It does, however, provide a finite gravitational potential for all . Most measurements that can be made are relatively insensitive to the outer halo's mass distribution. This is a consequence of Newton's laws, which state that if the shape of the halo is spheroidal or elliptical there will be no net gravitational effect from halo mass a distance from the galactic center on an object that is closer to the galactic center than . The only dynamical variable related to the extent of the halo that can be constrained is the escape velocity: the fastest-moving stellar objects still gravitationally bound to the Galaxy can give a lower bound on the mass profile of the outer edges of the dark halo.
On the other hand, the halo of the Milky Way Galaxy is thought to derive from the Gaia Sausage.
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