Signature of a massive rotating metal-poor star imprinted in the Phoenix stellar stream
Andrew R. Casey, Alexander P. Ji, Terese T. Hansen, Ting S. Li, Sergey, E. Koposov, Gary S. Da Costa, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Lara Cullinane, Denis, Erkal, Geraint F. Lewis, Kyler Kuehn, Dougal Mackey, Sarah L. Martell, Andrew, B. Pace, Jeffrey D. Simpson, and Daniel B. Zucker

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectroscopy of Phoenix stellar stream stars to reveal chemical signatures indicating a massive, fast-rotating metal-poor star influenced its formation, providing insights into early stellar evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first evidence of neutron capture element production from a massive fast-rotating metal-poor star in a globular cluster progenitor, based on detailed chemical abundance analysis.
Findings
Negligible metallicity scatter in Phoenix stream stars
Detection of a large spread in [Sr II/Fe] abundance
Identification of a lithium-rich giant among the stream stars
Abstract
The Phoenix stellar stream has a low intrinsic dispersion in velocity and metallicity that implies the progenitor was probably a low mass globular cluster. In this work we use Magellan/MIKE high-dispersion spectroscopy of eight Phoenix stream red giants to confirm this scenario. In particular, we find negligible intrinsic scatter in metallicity () and a large peak-to-peak range in [Na/Fe] and [Al/Fe] abundance ratios, consistent with the light element abundance patterns seen in the most metal-poor globular clusters. However, unlike any other globular cluster, we also find an intrinsic spread in [Sr II/Fe] spanning 1 dex, while [Ba II/Fe] shows nearly no intrinsic spread (). This abundance signature is best interpreted as slow neutron capture element production from a massive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
