A re-interpretation of the Triangulum-Andromeda stellar clouds: a population of halo stars kicked out of the Galactic disk
Adrian M. Price-Whelan, Kathryn V. Johnston, Allyson A. Sheffield,, Chervin F. P. Laporte, Branimir Sesar

TL;DR
This study reinterprets the Triangulum-Andromeda stellar clouds as stars ejected from the Galactic disk rather than accreted from satellites, supported by star population analysis and simulations.
Contribution
It provides evidence that the TriAnd clouds are likely stars kicked out from the Galactic disk, challenging the traditional accretion origin hypothesis.
Findings
The stellar population ratio in TriAnd clouds resembles the Galactic disk more than satellite galaxies.
Simulations show disk perturbations can produce similar over-densities.
Supports the idea of stars being ejected from the disk into the halo.
Abstract
The Triangulum-Andromeda stellar clouds (TriAnd1 and TriAnd2) are a pair of concentric ring- or shell-like over-densities at large ( 30 kpc) and ( -10 kpc) in the Galactic halo that are thought to have been formed from the accretion and disruption of a satellite galaxy. This paper critically re-examines this formation scenario by comparing the number ratio of RR Lyrae to M giant stars associated with the TriAnd clouds with other structures in the Galaxy. The current data suggest a stellar population for these over-densities ( at 95% confidence) quite unlike any of the known satellites of the Milky Way ( for the very largest and for the smaller satellites) and more like the population of stars born in the much deeper potential well inhabited by the Galactic disk (). N-body…
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