Stellar Abundances for Galactic Archaeology Database IV - Compilation of Stars in Dwarf Galaxies
Takuma Suda, Jun Hidaka, Wako Aoki, Yutaka Katsuta, Shimako Yamada,, Masayuki Y. Fujimoto, Yukari Ohtani, Miyu Masuyama, Kazuhiro Noda, Kentaro, Wada

TL;DR
This paper presents an expanded stellar abundance database for dwarf galaxies, analyzes chemical evolution patterns, and investigates star formation histories and elemental abundance trends across multiple local group galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces an updated, comprehensive database of stars in dwarf galaxies and applies consistent analysis methods to study their chemical and star formation properties.
Findings
The 'knee' in [alpha/Fe] occurs at [Fe/H] = -1.0 in the Milky Way.
No metallicity gradient dependence along galaxy axes.
Lack of CEMP-s stars; possible CEMP-no stars at low metallicity.
Abstract
We have constructed the database of stars in the local group using the extended version of the SAGA (Stellar Abundances for Galactic Archaeology) database that contains stars in 24 dwarf spheroidal galaxies and ultra faint dwarfs. The new version of the database includes more than 4500 stars in the Milky Way, by removing the previous metallicity criterion of [Fe/H] <= -2.5, and more than 6000 stars in the local group galaxies. We examined a validity of using a combined data set for elemental abundances. We also checked a consistency between the derived distances to individual stars and those to galaxies in the literature values. Using the updated database, the characteristics of stars in dwarf galaxies are discussed. Our statistical analyses of alpha-element abundances show that the change of the slope of the [alpha/Fe] relative to [Fe/H] (so-called "knee") occurs at [Fe/H] = -1.0+-0.1…
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.
