The S2 Stream: the shreds of a primitive dwarf galaxy
David S. Aguado, G. C. Myeong, Vasily Belokurov, N. W. Evans, Sergey, E. Koposov, Carlos Allende Prieto, Gustavo A. Lanfranchi, Francesca, Matteucci, Matthew Shetrone, Luca Sbordone, Camila Navarrete, Jonay I., Gonz\'alez Hern\'andez, Julio Chanam\'e, Luis Peralta de Arriba

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical composition of stars in the S2 stream, revealing it originated from a primitive dwarf galaxy with specific chemical evolution characteristics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed chemical abundance analysis of S2 stream stars, confirming their origin from a disrupted dwarf galaxy and offering insights into its star formation history.
Findings
S2 stream stars show coherent abundance patterns across a metallicity spread.
The alpha-element trend suggests a 'knee' at [Fe/H]<-2.
Some low-metallicity stars are carbon-enhanced and Ba-rich.
Abstract
The S2 stream is a kinematically cold stream that is plunging downwards through the Galactic disc. It may be part of a hotter and more diffuse structure called the Helmi stream. We present a multi-instrument chemical analysis of the stars in the metal-poor S2 stream using both high- and low-resolution spectroscopy, complemented with a re-analysis of the archival data to give a total sample of 62 S2 members. Our high-resolution program provides alpha-elements (C, Mg, Si, Ca and Ti), iron-peak elements (V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni), n-capture process elements (Sr, Ba) and other elements such as Li, Na, Al, and Sc for a subsample of S2 objects. We report coherent abundance patterns over a large metallicity spread (~1 dex) confirming that the S2 stream was produced by a disrupted dwarf galaxy. The combination of S2's -elements displays a mildly decreasing trend with increasing metallicity…
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.
