ABSTRACT A model of the Galaxy with the outer ring R1R2 can explain the observed distribution of the radial, VR, and azimuthal, VT, velocity components along the Galactocentric distance, R, derived from the Gaia EDR3 data. We selected stars from the Gaia EDR3 catalogue with reliable parallaxes, proper motions, and line-of-sight velocities lying near the Galactic plane, |z| < 200 pc, and in the sector of the Galactocentric angles |θ| < 15° and calculated the median velocities VR and VT in small bins along the distance R. The distribution of observed velocities appears to have some specific features: the radial velocity VR demonstrates a smooth fall from +5 km s−1 at the distance of R ≈ R0 − 1.5 kpc to −3 km s−1 at R ≈ R0 + 1.0 kpc while the azimuthal velocity VT shows a sharp drop by 7 km s−1 in the distance interval R0 < R < R0 + 1.0 kpc, where R0 is the solar Galactocentric distance. We build a model of the Galaxy including bulge, bar, disc, and halo components, which reproduces the observed specific features of the velocity distribution in the Galactocentric distance interval |R − R0| < 1.5 kpc. The best agreement corresponds to the time 1.8 ± 0.5 Gyr after the start of the simulation. A model of the Galaxy with the bar rotating at the angular velocity of Ωb = 55 ± 3 km s−1 kpc−1, which sets the OLR of the bar at the distance of R0 − 0.5 ± 0.4 kpc, provides the best agreement between the model and observed velocities. The position angle of the bar, θb, corresponding to the best agreement between the model and observed velocities is θb = 45 ± 15°.
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