Reconstructing the Accretion History of the Galactic Stellar Halo from Chemical Abundance Ratio Distributions
Duane M. Lee, Kathryn V. Johnston, Bodhisattva Sen, and Will Jessop

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that analyzing 2-D chemical abundance ratio distributions in halo stars can effectively reconstruct the Milky Way's accretion history, especially for ancient, faint dwarf galaxy contributions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method using 2-D chemical abundance ratios and the expectation-maximization algorithm to infer the galaxy's accretion history from simulated data.
Findings
Method can identify relative mass contributions within a factor of 2
Sensitive to ancient, low-luminous dwarf galaxy accretion events
Future high-dimensional surveys will enhance reconstruction accuracy
Abstract
Observational studies of halo stars during the last two decades have placed some limits on the quantity and nature of accreted dwarf galaxy contributions to the Milky Way stellar halo by typically utilizing stellar phase-space information to identify the most recent halo accretion events. In this study we tested the prospects of using 2-D chemical abundance ratio distributions (CARDs) found in stars of the stellar halo to determine its formation history. First, we used simulated data from eleven "MW-like" halos to generate satellite template sets of 2-D CARDs of accreted dwarf satellites which are comprised of accreted dwarfs from various mass regimes and epochs of accretion. Next, we randomly drew samples of mock observations of stellar chemical abundance ratios ([/Fe], [Fe/H]) from those eleven halos to generate samples of the underlying densities for our CARDs…
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