The COS/UVES Absorption Survey of the Magellanic Stream: I. One-Tenth Solar Abundances along the Body of the Stream
Andrew J. Fox, Philipp Richter, Bart P. Wakker, Nicolas Lehner, J., Christopher Howk, Nadya Ben Bekhti, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Stephen Lucas

TL;DR
This study measures the metallicity of the Magellanic Stream using UV and optical spectra, revealing a mostly uniform low abundance of about 0.1 solar, supporting a tidal origin from the SMC about 1.5-2.5 billion years ago.
Contribution
First to provide detailed chemical abundance measurements along multiple sightlines of the Magellanic Stream, confirming its low metallicity and complex bifurcation in metal enrichment.
Findings
Magellanic Stream has ~0.1 solar metallicity along its main body.
Metallicity varies in different filaments, indicating bifurcation.
Associated anomalous velocity clouds likely linked to the Stream.
Abstract
The Magellanic Stream (MS) is a massive and extended tail of multi-phase gas stripped out of the Magellanic Clouds and interacting with the Galactic halo. In this first paper of an ongoing program to study the Stream in absorption, we present a chemical abundance analysis based on HST/COS and VLT/UVES spectra of four AGN (RBS 144, NGC 7714, PHL 2525, and HE 0056-3622) lying behind the MS. Two of these sightlines yield good MS metallicity measurements: toward RBS 144 we measure a low MS metallicity of [S/H]=[S II/H I]=-1.13+/-0.16 while toward NGC 7714 we measure [O/H]=[O I/H I]=-1.24+/-0.20. Taken together with the published MS metallicity toward NGC 7469, these measurements indicate a uniform abundance of ~0.1 solar along the main body of the Stream. This provides strong support to a scenario in which most of the Stream was tidally stripped from the SMC ~1.5--2.5 Gyr ago (a time at…
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