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Chemical Cartography. II. The Assembly History of the Galactic Stellar Halo Traced by Carbon-Enhanced Metal-Poor Stars

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arxiv 1909.11254 v1 pith:2AS2B6KN submitted 2019-09-25 astro-ph.GA

Chemical Cartography. II. The Assembly History of the Galactic Stellar Halo Traced by Carbon-Enhanced Metal-Poor Stars

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords starshalocemp-noregionstellarcemp-distributiongalactic
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We present an analysis of the kinematic properties of stellar populations in the Galactic halo, making use of over 100,000 main sequence turnoff (MSTO) stars observed in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. After dividing the Galactic halo into an inner-halo region (IHR) and outer-halo region (OHR), based on the spatial variation of carbon-to-iron ratios in the sample, we find that stars in the OHR exhibit a clear retrograde motion of $-$49 $\pm$ 4 km s$^{-1}$ and a more spherical distribution of stellar orbits, while stars in the IHR have zero net rotation ($-$3 $\pm$ 1 km s$^{-1}$) with a much more radially biased distribution of stellar orbits. Furthermore, we classify the carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars among the MSTO sample in each halo component into CEMP-no and CEMP-$s$ sub-classes, based on their absolute carbon abundances, $A$(C), and examine the spatial distributions and kinematics associated with each sub-class. The CEMP-no stars are the majority sub-class of CEMP stars in the OHR ($\sim$ 65%), and the minority sub-class in the IHR ($\sim$ 44%), similar to the results of several previous analyses. The CEMP-no stars in each halo region exhibit slightly higher counter-rotation than the CEMP-$s$ stars, but within statistical errors. The CEMP-no stars also show a more spherical distribution of orbits than the CEMP-$s$ stars in each halo region. These distinct characteristics provide strong evidence that numerous low-mass satellite galaxies (similar to the ultra-faint dwarf galaxies) have donated stars to the OHR, while more-massive dwarf galaxies provided the dominant contribution to the IHR.

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