The origin of accreted stellar halo populations in the Milky Way using APOGEE, $\textit{Gaia}$, and the EAGLE simulations
J. Ted Mackereth, Ricardo P. Schiavon, Joel Pfeffer, Christian R., Hayes, Jo Bovy, Borja Anguiano, Carlos Allende Prieto, Sten Hasselquist, Jon, Holtzman, Jennifer A. Johnson, Steven R. Majewski, Robert O'Connell, Matthew, Shetrone, Patricia B. Tissera, J. G. Fern\'andez-Trincado

TL;DR
This study combines observational data and simulations to analyze the origin of the Milky Way's stellar halo, revealing a major accretion event from a dwarf galaxy with specific properties and constraining its mass and timing.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the accretion history of the Milky Way by identifying the characteristics and origin of halo stars using APOGEE, Gaia data, and EAGLE simulations.
Findings
Approximately two-thirds of nearby halo stars have high orbital eccentricities.
High e stars show abundance patterns typical of massive dwarf galaxy satellites.
The accreted satellite's mass is constrained to between 10^8.5 and 10^9 solar masses.
Abstract
Recent work indicates that the nearby Galactic halo is dominated by the debris from a major accretion event. We confirm that result from an analysis of APOGEE-DR14 element abundances and -DR2 kinematics of halo stars. We show that 2/3 of nearby halo stars have high orbital eccentricities (), and abundance patterns typical of massive Milky Way dwarf galaxy satellites today, characterised by relatively low [Fe/H], [Mg/Fe], [Al/Fe], and [Ni/Fe]. The trend followed by high stars in the [Mg/Fe]-[Fe/H] plane shows a change of slope at [Fe/H], which is also typical of stellar populations from relatively massive dwarf galaxies. Low stars exhibit no such change of slope within the observed [Fe/H] range and show slightly higher abundances of Mg, Al and Ni. Unlike their low counterparts, high stars show slightly retrograde motion, make…
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