Galactocentric¶
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class
astropy.coordinates.Galactocentric(*args, **kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
astropy.coordinates.BaseCoordinateFrameA coordinate or frame in the Galactocentric system. This frame requires specifying the Sun-Galactic center distance, and optionally the height of the Sun above the Galactic midplane.
The position of the Sun is assumed to be on the x axis of the final, right-handed system. That is, the x axis points from the position of the Sun projected to the Galactic midplane to the Galactic center – roughly towards \((l,b) = (0^\circ,0^\circ)\). For the default transformation (\({\rm roll}=0^\circ\)), the y axis points roughly towards Galactic longitude \(l=90^\circ\), and the z axis points roughly towards the North Galactic Pole (\(b=90^\circ\)).
The default position of the Galactic Center in ICRS coordinates is taken from Reid et al. 2004, http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2004ApJ…616..872R.
\[\begin{split}{\rm RA} = 17:45:37.224~{\rm hr}\\ {\rm Dec} = -28:56:10.23~{\rm deg}\end{split}\]The default distance to the Galactic Center is 8.3 kpc, e.g., Gillessen et al. (2009), https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2009ApJ…692.1075G/abstract
The default height of the Sun above the Galactic midplane is taken to be 27 pc, as measured by Chen et al. (2001), https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2001ApJ…553..184C/abstract
The default solar motion relative to the Galactic center is taken from a combination of Schönrich et al. (2010) [for the peculiar velocity] and Bovy (2015) [for the circular velocity at the solar radius], https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2010MNRAS.403.1829S/abstract https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2015ApJS..216…29B/abstract
For a more detailed look at the math behind this transformation, see the document Description of Galactocentric Coordinates Transformation.
The frame attributes are listed under Other Parameters.
Parameters: - data :
BaseRepresentationsubclass instance A representation object or
Noneto have no data (or use the coordinate component arguments, see below).- x :
Quantity, optional Cartesian, Galactocentric \(x\) position component.
- y :
Quantity, optional Cartesian, Galactocentric \(y\) position component.
- z :
Quantity, optional Cartesian, Galactocentric \(z\) position component.
- v_x :
Quantity, optional Cartesian, Galactocentric \(v_x\) velocity component.
- v_y :
Quantity, optional Cartesian, Galactocentric \(v_y\) velocity component.
- v_z :
Quantity, optional Cartesian, Galactocentric \(v_z\) velocity component.
- representation_type :
BaseRepresentationsubclass, str, optional A representation class or string name of a representation class. This sets the expected input representation class, thereby changing the expected keyword arguments for the data passed in. For example, passing
representation_type='cartesian'will make the classes expect position data with cartesian names, i.e.x, y, zin most cases.- differential_type :
BaseDifferentialsubclass, str, dict, optional A differential class or dictionary of differential classes (currently only a velocity differential with key ‘s’ is supported). This sets the expected input differential class, thereby changing the expected keyword arguments of the data passed in. For example, passing
differential_type='cartesian'will make the classes expect velocity data with the argument namesv_x, v_y, v_z.- copy : bool, optional
If
True(default), make copies of the input coordinate arrays. Can only be passed in as a keyword argument.
Other Parameters: - galcen_coord :
ICRS, optional, must be keyword The ICRS coordinates of the Galactic center.
- galcen_distance :
Quantity, optional, must be keyword The distance from the sun to the Galactic center.
- galcen_v_sun :
CartesianDifferential, optional, must be keyword The velocity of the sun in the Galactocentric frame as Cartesian velocity components.
- z_sun :
Quantity, optional, must be keyword The distance from the sun to the Galactic midplane.
- roll :
Angle, optional, must be keyword The angle to rotate about the final x-axis, relative to the orientation for Galactic. For example, if this roll angle is 0, the final x-z plane will align with the Galactic coordinates x-z plane. Unless you really know what this means, you probably should not change this!
Examples
To transform to the Galactocentric frame with the default frame attributes, pass the uninstantiated class name to the
transform_to()method of a coordinate frame orSkyCoordobject:>>> import astropy.units as u >>> import astropy.coordinates as coord >>> c = coord.ICRS(ra=[158.3122, 24.5] * u.degree, ... dec=[-17.3, 81.52] * u.degree, ... distance=[11.5, 24.12] * u.kpc) >>> c.transform_to(coord.Galactocentric) <Galactocentric Coordinate (galcen_coord=<ICRS Coordinate: (ra, dec) in deg ( 266.4051, -28.936175)>, galcen_distance=8.3 kpc, galcen_v_sun=( 11.1, 232.24, 7.25) km / s, z_sun=27.0 pc, roll=0.0 deg): (x, y, z) in kpc [( -9.6083819 , -9.40062188, 6.52056066), (-21.28302307, 18.76334013, 7.84693855)]>
To specify a custom set of parameters, you have to include extra keyword arguments when initializing the Galactocentric frame object:
>>> c.transform_to(coord.Galactocentric(galcen_distance=8.1*u.kpc)) <Galactocentric Coordinate (galcen_coord=<ICRS Coordinate: (ra, dec) in deg ( 266.4051, -28.936175)>, galcen_distance=8.1 kpc, galcen_v_sun=( 11.1, 232.24, 7.25) km / s, z_sun=27.0 pc, roll=0.0 deg): (x, y, z) in kpc [( -9.40785924, -9.40062188, 6.52066574), (-21.08239383, 18.76334013, 7.84798135)]>
Similarly, transforming from the Galactocentric frame to another coordinate frame:
>>> c = coord.Galactocentric(x=[-8.3, 4.5] * u.kpc, ... y=[0., 81.52] * u.kpc, ... z=[0.027, 24.12] * u.kpc) >>> c.transform_to(coord.ICRS) <ICRS Coordinate: (ra, dec, distance) in (deg, deg, kpc) [( 86.22349059, 28.83894138, 4.39157788e-05), ( 289.66802652, 49.88763881, 8.59640735e+01)]>
Or, with custom specification of the Galactic center:
>>> c = coord.Galactocentric(x=[-8.0, 4.5] * u.kpc, ... y=[0., 81.52] * u.kpc, ... z=[21.0, 24120.0] * u.pc, ... z_sun=21 * u.pc, galcen_distance=8. * u.kpc) >>> c.transform_to(coord.ICRS) <ICRS Coordinate: (ra, dec, distance) in (deg, deg, kpc) [( 86.2585249 , 28.85773187, 2.75625475e-05), ( 289.77285255, 50.06290457, 8.59216010e+01)]>
Attributes Summary
default_differentialdefault_representationframe_attributesframe_specific_representation_infogalcen_coordgalcen_decgalcen_distancegalcen_ragalcen_v_sunnamerollz_sunMethods Summary
get_roll0()The additional roll angle (about the final x axis) necessary to align the final z axis to match the Galactic yz-plane. Attributes Documentation
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default_differential¶
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default_representation¶
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frame_attributes= {'galcen_coord': <astropy.coordinates.attributes.CoordinateAttribute object at 0x115274f98>, 'galcen_distance': <astropy.coordinates.attributes.QuantityAttribute object at 0x115274fd0>, 'galcen_v_sun': <astropy.coordinates.attributes.DifferentialAttribute object at 0x1152802b0>, 'roll': <astropy.coordinates.attributes.QuantityAttribute object at 0x115280320>, 'z_sun': <astropy.coordinates.attributes.QuantityAttribute object at 0x1152802e8>}¶
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frame_specific_representation_info¶
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galcen_coord= <ICRS Coordinate: (ra, dec) in deg (266.4051, -28.936175)>¶
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galcen_dec¶
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galcen_distance= <Quantity 8.3 kpc>¶
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galcen_ra¶
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galcen_v_sun= <CartesianDifferential (d_x, d_y, d_z) in km / s (11.1, 232.24, 7.25)>¶
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name= 'galactocentric'¶
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roll= <Quantity 0. deg>¶
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z_sun= <Quantity 27. pc>¶
Methods Documentation
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classmethod
get_roll0()[source]¶ The additional roll angle (about the final x axis) necessary to align the final z axis to match the Galactic yz-plane. Setting the
rollframe attribute to -this method’s return value removes this rotation, allowing the use of theGalactocentricframe in more general contexts.
- data :