A Detailed Chemical Study of the Extreme Velocity Stars in the Galaxy
Tyler Nelson, Keith Hawkins, Henrique Reggiani, Diego Garza, Rosemary, F.G. Wyse, Turner Woody

TL;DR
This study conducts high-resolution spectroscopic analysis of 16 hypervelocity star candidates, revealing their chemical compositions and kinematic states, and investigates their origins without identifying specific progenitor systems.
Contribution
It provides detailed chemical abundances and kinematic analysis of hypervelocity stars, enhancing understanding of their origins and acceleration mechanisms.
Findings
One star is unbound, two are marginally bound, others are bound.
Unbound stars likely originate from the stellar halo.
Bound stars are chemically consistent with the stellar halo.
Abstract
Two decades on, the study of hypervelocity stars is still in its infancy. These stars can provide novel constraints on the total mass of the Galaxy and its Dark Matter distribution. However how these stars are accelerated to such high velocities is unclear. Various proposed production mechanisms for these stars can be distinguished using chemo-dynamic tagging. The advent of Gaia and other large surveys have provided hundreds of candidate hyper velocity objects to target for ground based high resolution follow-up observations. We conduct high resolution spectroscopic follow-up observations of 16 candidate late-type hyper velocity stars using the Apache Point Observatory and the McDonald Observatory. We derive atmospheric parameters and chemical abundances for these stars. We measure up to 22 elements, including the following nucleosynthetic families: {\alpha} (Mg, Si, Ca, Ti),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
