Discovery of low-metallicity stars in the central parsec of the Milky Way
Tuan Do (1, 2), Wolfgang Kerzendorf (3, 4), Nathan Winsor (1 and, 5), Morten St{\o}stad (3), Mark R. Morris (2), Jessica R. Lu (6), Andrea M., Ghez (2) ((1) Dunlap Institute, University of Toronto, (2) Physics and, Astronomy Department, UCLA, (3) Department of Astronomy

TL;DR
This study reveals a wide range of metallicities among stars in the Milky Way's central parsec, challenging previous assumptions of uniform solar metallicity and suggesting diverse origins for these stars.
Contribution
First detailed metallicity analysis of 83 stars in the Galactic center showing significant variation, including low-metallicity stars, using K-band spectroscopy and spectral template fitting.
Findings
Large metallicity variation among stars
Presence of low-metallicity stars similar to globular clusters
Most stars have solar or above solar metallicity
Abstract
We present a metallicity analysis of 83 late-type giants within the central 1 pc of the Milky Way. K-band spectroscopy of these stars were obtained with the medium-spectral resolution integral-field spectrograph NIFS on Gemini North using laser-guide star adaptive optics. Using spectral template fitting with the MARCS synthetic spectral grid, we find that there is large variation in metallicity, with stars ranging from [M/H] -1.0 to above solar metallicity. About 6\% of the stars have [M/H] -0.5. This result is in contrast to previous observations, with smaller samples, that show stars at the Galactic center have approximately solar metallicity with only small variations. Our current measurement uncertainties are dominated by systematics in the model, especially at [M/H] 0, where there are stellar lines not represented in the model. However, the conclusion that there are low…
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