Are ancient dwarf satellites the building blocks of the Galactic halo?
E. Spitoni, F. Vincenzo, F. Matteucci, D. Romano

TL;DR
This study investigates whether dwarf satellites of the Milky Way contributed to the Galactic halo's formation by comparing their chemical abundance patterns, finding that in situ star formation is likely dominant, with some contribution from dwarf systems.
Contribution
It introduces the first analysis of the impact of enriched gas infall from dwarf satellites on the chemical evolution of the Galactic halo.
Findings
[$ m ext{Ba/Fe}$] ratios better trace halo origins than [$ m ext{α/Fe}$] ratios.
Enriched infall models with specific parameters reproduce observed halo metallicities.
Most halo stars likely formed in situ, with some from dwarf spheroidal systems.
Abstract
According to the current cosmological cold dark matter paradigm, the Galactic halo could have been the result of the assemblage of smaller structures. Here we explore the hypothesis that the classical and ultra-faint dwarf spheroidal satellites of the Milky Way have been the building blocks of the Galactic halo by comparing their [/Fe] and [Ba/Fe] versus [Fe/H] patterns with the ones observed in Galactic halo stars. The elements deviate substantially from the observed abundances in the Galactic halo stars for [Fe/H] values larger than -2 dex, while they overlap for lower metallicities. On the other hand, for the [Ba/Fe] ratio the discrepancy is extended at all [Fe/H] values, suggesting that the majority of stars in the halo are likely to have been formed in situ. Therefore, we suggest that [Ba/Fe] ratios are a better diagnostic than [/Fe] ratios. Moreover, for…
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.
