Very Metal-Poor Outer-Halo Stars with Round Orbits
Kohei Hattori, Yuzuru Yoshii, Timothy C. Beers, Daniela Carollo, Young, Sun Lee

TL;DR
This study analyzes the orbital motions of very metal-poor halo stars in the Milky Way, revealing that their orbital shapes and rotational velocities vary with metallicity, supporting the inner/outer halo structure hypothesis.
Contribution
It provides a model-independent analysis of distant halo stars, showing a correlation between metallicity and orbital eccentricity, which was previously less understood.
Findings
Very metal-poor stars have rounder, lower-eccentricity orbits.
More metal-rich stars are dominated by eccentric orbits.
Metallicity correlates with orbital properties, supporting the inner/outer halo structure.
Abstract
The orbital motions of halo stars in the Milky Way reflect the orbital motions of the progenitor systems in which they formed, making it possible to trace the mass-assembly history of the Galaxy. Direct measurement of three-dimensional velocities, based on accurate proper motions and line-of-sight velocities, has revealed that the majority of halo stars in the inner-halo region move on eccentric orbits. However, our understanding of the motions of distant, in-situ halo-star samples is still limited, due to the lack of accurate proper motions for these stars. Here we explore a model-independent analysis of the line-of-sight velocities and spatial distribution of a recent sample of 1865 carefully selected halo blue horizontal-branch (BHB) stars within 30 kpc of the Galactic center. We find that the mean rotational velocity of the very metal-poor ([Fe/H] < -2.0) BHB stars significantly…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
