Carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars in dwarf galaxies
Stefania Salvadori, Asa Skuladottir, Eline Tolstoy

TL;DR
This paper models the occurrence and origins of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars in dwarf galaxies, revealing how galaxy luminosity influences their frequency and distribution, and providing insights into early stellar populations.
Contribution
It introduces a cosmological model that explains the variation in CEMP star properties across dwarf galaxies and predicts their distribution based on galaxy luminosity.
Findings
CEMP-no stars are expected in all dwarf galaxies if early faint supernovae dominated enrichment.
Probability of observing CEMP stars depends strongly on galaxy luminosity.
Higher fraction of CEMP stars at low metallicity in less luminous dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
We investigate the frequency and origin of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars in Local Group dwarf galaxies by means of a statistical, data-calibrated cosmological model for the hierarchical build-up of the Milky Way and its dwarf satellites. The model self-consistently explains the variation with dwarf galaxy luminosity of the observed: i) frequency and [Fe/H] range of CEMP stars; ii) metallicity distribution functions; iii) star formation histories. We show that if primordial faint supernovae dominated the early metal enrichment, then CEMP-no stars enriched by the first stellar generations should be present in all dwarf galaxies, with similar number of stars and CEMP fractions at [Fe/H]. We demonstrate that the probability to observe a star that is carbon-enhanced within a given [Fe/H] range strongly depends on the luminosity of the dwarf galaxy and, on average, it is an…
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.
