Evidence from the H3 Survey that the Stellar Halo is Entirely Comprised of Substructure
Rohan P. Naidu, Charlie Conroy, Ana Bonaca, Benjamin D. Johnson,, Yuan-Sen Ting, Nelson Caldwell, Dennis Zaritsky, Phillip A. Cargile

TL;DR
This study uses the H3 Survey and Gaia data to show that the Milky Way's stellar halo within 50 kpc is almost entirely made up of accreted substructures, with minimal in-situ stars.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive inventory of halo structures, including new discoveries, and demonstrates that over 95% of the halo is formed from accreted dwarf galaxies.
Findings
Most halo stars beyond 15 kpc originate from two massive accreted dwarfs.
The halo is predominantly composed of debris from known and newly identified accretion events.
In-situ stars constitute less than 5% of the halo beyond 15 kpc.
Abstract
In the CDM paradigm the Galactic stellar halo is predicted to harbor the accreted debris of smaller systems. To identify these systems, the H3 Spectroscopic Survey, combined with , is gathering 6D phase-space and chemical information in the distant Galaxy. Here we present a comprehensive inventory of structure within 50 kpc from the Galactic center using a sample of 5684 giants at and kpc. We identify known structures including the high- disk, the in-situ halo (disk stars heated to eccentric orbits), Sagittarius (Sgr), -Sausage-Enceladus (GSE), the Helmi Streams, Sequoia, and Thamnos. Additionally, we identify the following new structures: (i) Aleph ([Fe/H]), a low eccentricity structure that rises a surprising 10 kpc off the plane, (ii, iii) Arjuna ([Fe/H]) and I'itoi ([Fe/H]), which comprise the high-energy…
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