Chemical Inhomogeneities in the Milky Way Stellar Halo
Ian U. Roederer (University of Texas)

TL;DR
This study analyzes chemical abundance patterns in 699 Milky Way halo stars, revealing that the inner halo is chemically homogeneous while the outer halo is diverse, indicating different formation histories and enrichment processes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of chemical abundances between inner and outer halo populations, highlighting differences in homogeneity and enrichment history.
Findings
Inner halo is chemically homogeneous, suggesting well-mixed ISM origin.
Outer halo shows diverse chemical patterns, indicating localized enrichment.
No correlation between abundance patterns and galactic position or kinematics.
Abstract
We have compiled a sample of 699 stars from the recent literature with detailed chemical abundance information (spanning -4.2 < [Fe/H] < +0.3), and we compute their space velocities and Galactic orbital parameters. We identify members of the inner and outer stellar halo populations in our sample based only on their kinematic properties and then compare the abundance ratios of these populations as a function of [Fe/H]. In the metallicity range where the two populations overlap (-2.5 < [Fe/H] < -1.5), the mean [Mg/Fe] of the outer halo is lower than the inner halo by ~0.1 dex. For [Ni/Fe] and [Ba/Fe], the star-to-star abundance scatter of the inner halo is consistently smaller than in the outer halo. The [Na/Fe], [Y/Fe], [Ca/Fe], and [Ti/Fe] ratios of both populations show similar means and levels of scatter. Our inner halo population is chemically homogeneous, suggesting that a…
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