Light Curve Templates and Galactic Distribution of RR Lyrae Stars from Sloan Digital Sky Survey Stripe 82
Branimir Sesar, Zeljko Ivezic, Skyler H. Grammer, Dylan P. Morgan,, Andrew C. Becker, Mario Juric, Nathan De Lee, James Annis, Timothy C. Beers,, Xiaohui Fan, Robert H. Lupton, James E. Gunn, Gillian R. Knapp, Linhua Jiang,, Sebastian Jester, David E. Johnston, Hubert Lampeitl

TL;DR
This study refines the analysis of RR Lyrae stars in SDSS Stripe 82, revealing inhomogeneous halo distribution, increased substructure at larger distances, and metallicity differences supporting galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It introduces improved light curve templates and a novel method combining RR Lyrae and main sequence star data for halo structure and metallicity analysis.
Findings
Halo stars are highly inhomogeneous at 5-100 kpc.
At least 20% of stars within 30 kpc are in substructure.
Outer halo stars are more metal-poor than inner halo stars.
Abstract
We present an improved analysis of halo substructure traced by RR Lyrae stars in the SDSS stripe 82 region. With the addition of SDSS-II data, a revised selection method based on new ugriz light curve templates results in a sample of 483 RR Lyrae stars that is essentially free of contamination. The main result from our first study persists: the spatial distribution of halo stars at galactocentric distances 5--100 kpc is highly inhomogeneous. At least 20% of halo stars within 30 kpc from the Galactic center can be statistically associated with substructure. We present strong direct evidence, based on both RR Lyrae stars and main sequence stars, that the halo stellar number density profile significantly steepens beyond a Galactocentric distance of ~30 kpc, and a larger fraction of the stars are associated with substructure. By using a novel method that simultaneously combines data for RR…
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