The COMBS Survey -- II. Distinguishing the Metal-Poor Bulge from the Halo Interlopers
Madeline Lucey, Keith Hawkins, Melissa Ness, Victor P. Debattista,, Alice Luna, Martin Asplund, Thomas Bensby, Luca Casagrande, Sofia Feltzing,, Kenneth C. Freeman, Chiaki Kobayashi, Anna F. Marino

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic and astrometric data to distinguish between true bulge stars and halo interlopers among metal-poor stars in the Milky Way's bulge, revealing a mixed population with different origins.
Contribution
It introduces a probabilistic orbital analysis method to differentiate bulge members from halo interlopers among metal-poor stars, clarifying their origins.
Findings
Approximately half of the metal-poor bulge stars are halo interlopers.
Halo interlopers increase with decreasing metallicity.
The metal-poor bulge contains at least two distinct populations.
Abstract
The metal-poor stars in the bulge are important relics of the Milky Way's formation history, as simulations predict that they are some of the oldest stars in the Galaxy. In order to determine if they are truly ancient stars, we must understand the origins of this population. Currently, it is unclear if the metal-poor stars in the bulge ([Fe/H] < -1 dex) are merely halo interlopers, a unique accreted population, part of the boxy/peanut-shaped (B/P) bulge or a classical bulge population. In this work, we use spectra from the VLT/FLAMES spectrograph to obtain metallicity estimates using the Ca-II triplet (CaT) of 473 bulge stars (187 of which have [Fe/H]<-1 dex), targeted using SkyMapper photometry. We also use Gaia DR2 parallaxes and proper motions to infer the Galactic positions and velocities along with orbital properties for 523 bulge stars. We employ a probabilistic orbit analysis and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeochemistry and Geologic Mapping · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Image Processing and 3D Reconstruction
