The Pristine Inner Galaxy Survey (PIGS) VIII: Characterising the orbital properties of the ancient, very metal-poor inner Milky Way
Anke Ardern-Arentsen, Giacomo Monari, Anna B. A. Queiroz, Else, Starkenburg, Nicolas F. Martin, Cristina Chiappini, David S. Aguado, Vasily, Belokurov, Ray Carlberg, Stephanie Monty, GyuChul Myeong, Mathias Schultheis,, Federico Sestito, Kim A. Venn, Sara Vitali, Zhen Yuan

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic data from PIGS to analyze the orbital properties of ancient, metal-poor stars in the inner Milky Way, revealing distinct spheroidal components and their possible origins.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale orbital analysis of very metal-poor stars in the inner Galaxy, highlighting a potential transition between different spheroidal components.
Findings
Most stars have pressure-supported orbits.
Many VMP stars remain confined within 5 kpc.
Orbital properties suggest two spheroidal components with different metallicities and dynamics.
Abstract
The oldest stars in the Milky Way (born in the first few billion years) are expected to have a high density in the inner few kpc, spatially overlapping with the Galactic bulge. We use spectroscopic data from the Pristine Inner Galaxy Survey (PIGS) to study the dynamical properties of ancient, metal-poor inner Galaxy stars. We compute distances using StarHorse, and orbital properties in a barred Galactic potential. With this paper, we release the spectroscopic AAT/PIGS catalogue (13 235 stars). We find that most PIGS stars have orbits typical for a pressure-supported population. The fraction of stars confined to the inner Galaxy decreases with decreasing metallicity, but many very metal-poor stars (VMP, [Fe/H] < -2.0) stay confined (~ 60% stay within 5 kpc). The azimuthal velocity v also decreases between [Fe/H] = -1.0 and -2.0, but is constant for VMP stars (at ~ 40 km/s). The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
