Abstract.We report the first results of star counts carried out with the National Astronomical Observatories (NAOC) • 49 00 .0 (J2000) (Galactic coordinates: l = 169.95The field of view is 0.95 deg 2 , and the spatial scale was 1 .67. Since star counts at high galactic latitudes are not strongly related to the radial distribution, they are well suited to study the vertical distribution of the Galaxy. In our model, the distribution of stars perpendicular to the plane of the Galaxy is given by two exponential disks (thin disk plus thick disk) and a de Vaucouleurs halo. Also, based on star counts, we derive the scale heights of the thin disk to be 320 +14 −15 pc and of the thick disk to be 640 +30 −32 pc, respectively, with a local density of 7.0 ± 1% of the thin disk. The errors of scale heights and the corresponding space number density normalization are estimated at a 68% confidential level. The density law for the Galactic halo population is also investigated. We find that the observed counts support an axial ratio of c/a ≤ 0.6 for a de Vaucouleurs r 1/4 law, implying a more flattened halo. We consider that it is possible that the halo has two subpopulations-a flattened inner halo and a spherical outer halo in the Milky Way, and such a halo model might resolve many of the divergences in star count results. We also derive the stellar luminosity function (SLF) for the thin disk, and it partly agrees with the Hipparcos luminosity function.
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