The Chemical Composition of Extreme-Velocity Stars
Henrique Reggiani, Alexander P. Ji, Kevin C. Schlaufman, Anna Frebel,, Lina Necib, Tyler Nelson, Keith Hawkins, and Jhon Yana Galarza

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical composition of 15 extreme-velocity stars to determine their origins, revealing that at least half are likely accreted extragalactic stars from disrupted dwarf galaxies.
Contribution
First detailed chemical analysis of late-type hypervelocity star candidates, distinguishing their extragalactic origins and tidal debris from dwarf galaxies.
Findings
At least 50% are accreted extragalactic stars.
Chemical signatures indicate enrichment from sub-Chandrasekhar mass Type Ia supernovae.
Stars are likely tidal debris from disrupted dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
Little is known about the origin of the fastest stars in the Galaxy. Our understanding of the Milky Way and surrounding dwarf galaxies chemical evolution history allows us to use the chemical composition of a star to investigate its origin, and say whether a star was formed in-situ or was accreted. However, the fastest stars, the hypervelocity stars, are young and massive and their chemical composition has not yet been analyzed. Though it is difficult to analyze the chemical composition of a massive young star, we are well versed in the analysis of late-type stars. We have used high-resolution ARCES/3.5m Apache Point Observatory, MIKE/Magellan spectra to study the chemical details of 15 late-type hypervelocity stars candidates. With Gaia EDR3 astrometry and spectroscopically determined radial velocities we found total velocities with a range of - km s and mean value…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
