Chemistry of the Most Metal-poor Stars in the Bulge and the z > 10 Universe
Andrew R. Casey, Kevin C. Schlaufman

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical composition and dynamics of the most metal-poor stars in the Milky Way's bulge to infer their origins and the early universe's conditions at high redshifts.
Contribution
It provides detailed chemical abundances of the most metal-poor bulge stars and links their properties to early galaxy formation at redshifts above 10.
Findings
Three extremely metal-poor bulge stars identified.
Stars follow halo star abundance trends except for scandium.
Evidence suggests some stars formed at redshifts greater than 10.
Abstract
Metal-poor stars in the Milky Way are local relics of the epoch of the first stars and the first galaxies. However, a low metallicity does not prove that a star formed in this ancient era, as metal-poor stars form over a range of redshift in different environments. Theoretical models of Milky Way formation have shown that at constant metallicity, the oldest stars are those closest to the center of the Galaxy on the most tightly-bound orbits. For that reason, the most metal-poor stars in the bulge of the Milky Way provide excellent tracers of the chemistry of the high-redshift universe. We report the dynamics and detailed chemical abundances of three stars in the bulge with [Fe/H] , two of which are the most metal-poor stars in the bulge in the literature. We find that with the exception of scandium, all three stars follow the abundance trends identified previously for…
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