The Metal-Poor Metallicity Distribution of the Ancient Milky Way
Anirudh Chiti, Mohammad K. Mardini, Anna Frebel, Tatsuya Daniel

TL;DR
This study maps the distribution of very metal-poor stars in the Milky Way using SkyMapper data, revealing their spatial distribution and metallicity trends across different galactic components.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive low-metallicity map of the Milky Way, differentiating metallicity dependence on scale height and characterizing the MDF of extremely metal-poor stars.
Findings
Metallicity decreases with scale height for stars with [Fe/H] > -2.0.
Very metal-poor stars ([Fe/H] < -2) are distributed throughout the galaxy.
The MDF of the most metal-poor stars follows an exponential profile.
Abstract
We present a low metallicity map of the Milky Way consisting of 111,000 giants with [Fe/H] 0.75, based on public photometry from the second data release of the SkyMapper survey. These stars extend out to 7kpc from the solar neighborhood and cover the main Galactic stellar populations, including the thick disk and the inner halo. Notably, this map can reliably differentiate metallicities down to [Fe/H] , and thus provides an unprecedented view into the ancient, metal-poor Milky Way. Among the more metal-rich stars in our sample ([Fe/H] ), we recover a clear spatial dependence of decreasing mean metallicity as a function of scale height that maps onto the thick disk component of the Milky Way. When only considering the very metal-poor stars in our sample ([Fe/H] 2), we recover no such spatial dependence in their mean…
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