Chemically tagging the Hyades stream: Does it partly originate from the Hyades cluster?
L. Pomp\'eia, T. Masseron, B. Famaey, S. Van Eck, A. Jorissen, I., Minchev, A. Siebert, C. Sneden, J.R.D. L\'epine, C. Siopis, G. Gentile, T., Dermine, E. Pasquato, H. Van Winckel, C. Waelkens, G. Raskin, S. Prins, W., Pessemier, H. Hensberge, Y. Fr\'emat, L. Dumortier

TL;DR
This study investigates the chemical composition of the Hyades stream to determine if it partly originates from the Hyades cluster, revealing a complex origin involving both cluster debris and resonance trapping in the galaxy.
Contribution
It provides evidence that the Hyades stream is not solely from the Hyades cluster but includes stars from the inner Galaxy, and proposes a resonance origin for the stream.
Findings
Hyades stream cannot be solely from the Hyades cluster
Some stream stars have cluster-like abundances
Resonance with spiral pattern explains stream properties
Abstract
The Hyades stream has long been thought to be a dispersed vestige of the Hyades cluster. However, recent analyses of the parallax distribution, of the mass function, and of the action-space distribution of stream stars have shown it to be rather composed of orbits trapped at a resonance of a density disturbance. This resonant scenario should leave a clearly different signature in the element abundances of stream stars than the dispersed cluster scenario, since the Hyades cluster is chemically homogeneous. Here, we study the metalllicty as well as the element abundances of Li, Na, Mg, Fe, Zr, Ba, La, Ce, Nd, and Eu for a random sample of stars belonging to the Hyades stream, and compare them with those of stars from the Hyades cluster. From this analysis: (i) we independently confirm that the Hyades stream cannot be solely composed of stars originating in the Hyades cluster; (ii) we show…
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