Where are the most ancient stars in the Milky Way?
Kareem El-Badry, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Andrew Wetzel, Eliot Quataert,, Daniel R. Weisz, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Philip F. Hopkins, Claude-Andr\'e, Faucher-Gigu\`ere, Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s}, Shea Garrison-Kimmel

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to predict the spatial distribution, chemistry, and kinematics of the oldest stars in the Milky Way, revealing they are mostly accreted and found in the halo rather than the center.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the origins and distribution of ancient stars in the Milky Way through detailed simulation analysis.
Findings
Old stars are less concentrated in the galactic center at present.
Most ancient stars are accreted, not formed in situ.
Old stars in the solar neighborhood are often halo-like orbits.
Abstract
The oldest stars in the Milky Way (MW) bear imprints of the Galaxy's early assembly history. We use FIRE cosmological zoom-in simulations of three MW-mass disk galaxies to study the spatial distribution, chemistry, and kinematics of the oldest surviving stars () in MW-like galaxies. We predict the oldest stars to be less centrally concentrated at than stars formed at later times as a result of two processes. First, the majority of the oldest stars are not formed but are accreted during hierarchical assembly. These stars are deposited on dispersion-supported, halo-like orbits but dominate over old stars formed in the solar neighborhood, and in some simulations, even in the galactic center. Secondly, old stars formed are driven outwards by bursty star formation and energetic feedback…
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