Discovery of a New Stellar Subpopulation Residing in the (Inner) Stellar Halo of the Milky Way

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TitreDiscovery of a New Stellar Subpopulation Residing in the (Inner) Stellar Halo of the Milky Way
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursFernandez-Trincado JG, Beers TC, Placco VM, Moreno E, Alves-Brito A, Minniti D, Tang B, Perez-Villegas A, Reyle C, Robin AC, Villanova S
JournalASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume886
PaginationL8
Date PublishedNOV 20
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN2041-8205
Mots-clésChemically peculiar stars, Galaxy stellar content, Galaxy stellar halos, High resolution spectroscopy, Silicon stars, Stellar abundances, Stellar dynamics, Stellar kinematics
Résumé

We report the discovery of a unique collection of metal-poor giant stars that exhibit anomalously high levels of Si-28, clearly above typical Galactic levels. Our sample spans a narrow range of metallicities, peaking at ?1.07;;0.06, and exhibits abundance ratios of [Si, Al/Fe] that are as extreme as those observed in Galactic globular clusters (GCs), and Mg is slightly less overabundant. In almost all the sources we used, the elemental abundances were redetermined from high-resolution spectra, which were reanalyzed assuming LTE. Thus, we compiled the main element families, namely, the light elements (C, N), ?-elements (O, Mg, Si), iron-peak element (Fe), s-process elements (Ce, Nd), and the light odd-Z element (Al). We also provide dynamical evidence that most of these stars lie on tight (inner) halo-like and retrograde orbits passing through the bulge. Such kinds of objects have been found in present-day halo GCs, providing the clearest chemical signature of past accretion events in the (inner) stellar halo of the galaxy, possibly formed as the result of dissolved halo GCs. Their chemical composition is, in general, similar to that of typical GC populations, although several differences exist.

DOI10.3847/2041-8213/ab5286