Discovery of a Metal-Poor Field Giant with a Globular Cluster Second-Generation Abundance Pattern
J. G. Fern\'andez-Trincado, A. C. Robin, E. Moreno, R. P. Schiavon, A., E. Garc\'ia Per\'ez, K. Vieira, K. Cunha, O. Zamora, C. Sneden, Diogo Souto,, R. Carrera, J. A. Johnson, M. Shetrone, G. Zasowski, D. A., Garc\'ia-Hern\'andez, S. R. Majewski, C. Reyl\'e, S. Blanco-Cuaresma

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a metal-poor field giant star with globular cluster-like second-generation abundance patterns, exploring its possible origin and orbital history to understand its unique chemical signature.
Contribution
It presents the identification and analysis of a rare star with globular cluster second-generation chemical signatures in the field, and investigates its potential origin through orbital dynamics.
Findings
Star has extreme Mg-Al abundance ratio typical of globular cluster second-generation stars.
Orbital analysis suggests possible origin from globular cluster ω Centauri.
Star's orbit is eccentric and retrograde, reaching close to the Galactic center.
Abstract
We report on detection, from observations obtained with the APOGEE spectroscopic survey, of a metal-poor ([Fe/H] dex) field giant star with an extreme Mg-Al abundance ratio ([Mg/Fe] dex; [Al/Fe] dex). Such low Mg/Al ratios are seen only among the second-generation population of globular clusters, and are not present among Galactic disk field stars. The light element abundances of this star, 2M16011638-1201525, suggest that it could have been born in a globular cluster. We explore several origin scenarios, in particular studying the orbit of the star to check the probability of it being kinematically related to known globular clusters. We performed simple orbital integrations assuming the estimated distance of 2M16011638-1201525 and the available six-dimensional phase-space coordinates of 63 globular clusters, looking for close encounters in the past with a…
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