Four-hundred Very Metal-poor Stars Studied with LAMOST and Subaru. III. Dynamically Tagged Groups and Chemodynamical Properties
Ruizhi Zhang, Tadafumi Matsuno, Haining Li, Wako Aoki, Xiang-Xiang, Xue, Takuma Suda, Gang Zhao, Yuqin Chen, Miho N. Ishigaki, Jianrong Shi,, Qianfan Xing, and Jingkun Zhao

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical and kinematic properties of 352 very metal-poor stars from LAMOST and Subaru, identifying their associations with known Galactic substructures and revealing chemodynamical signatures of early galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive chemodynamical analysis of VMP stars, identifying their groupings and chemical signatures, and offers new insights into the origins of these stars and Galactic assembly.
Findings
VMP disk shows lower Zn, suggesting relic of small systems
Sequoia has high r-process element abundances
Helmi streams are deficient in C and neutron-capture elements
Abstract
Very metal-poor (VMP) stars record the signatures of early accreted galaxies, making them essential tools for unraveling the early stages of Galaxy formation. Understanding the origin of VMP stars requires comprehensive studies of their chemical compositions and kinematics, which are currently lacking. Hence, we conduct a chemodynamical analysis of 352 VMP stars selected from one of the largest uniform high-resolution VMP star samples, jointly obtained from LAMOST and Subaru. We apply a friends-of-friends clustering algorithm to the master catalog of this high-resolution sample, which consists of 5778 VMP stars. It results in 131 dynamically tagged groups with 89 associated with known substructures in the Milky Way, including Gaia-Sausage-Enceladus (GSE), Thamnos, Helmi streams, Sequoia, Wukong, Pontus, and the very metal-poor disk (VMPD). Our findings are: (i) the VMPD shows lower Zn…
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