A chemical confirmation of the faint Bootes II dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
Andreas Koch, R. Michael Rich

TL;DR
This study confirms Bootes II as a chemically typical low-mass, metal-poor dwarf galaxy through high-resolution spectroscopy, challenging previous associations with the Sagittarius Stream and providing insights into its enrichment history.
Contribution
First detailed chemical abundance analysis of Bootes II confirming its nature as a low-mass, metal-poor dwarf galaxy with revised metallicity measurements.
Findings
Star shows typical metal-poor halo chemical signatures.
Re-calibrated metallicity to a lower value than previous estimates.
Bootes II's chemical properties align with its low mass and luminosity.
Abstract
We present a chemical abundance study of the brightest confirmed member star of the ultrafaint dwarf galaxy Bootes II from Keck/HIRES high-resolution spectroscopy at moderate signal-to-noise ratios. At [Fe/H] = -2.93 +/- 0.03 (stat.) +/- 0.17 (sys.) this star chemically resembles metal-poor halo field stars and the signatures of other faint dwarf spheroidal galaxies at the same metallicities in that it shows enhanced [alpha/Fe] ratios, Solar Fe-peak element abundances, and low upper limits on the neutron-capture element Ba. Moreover, this star shows no chemical peculiarities in any of the eight elements we were able to measure. This implies that the chemical outliers found in other systems remain outliers pertaining to the unusual enrichment histories of the respective environments, while Bootes II appears to have experienced an enrichment history typical of its very low mass. We also…
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