Identifying substructure associations in the Milky Way halo using chemo-kinematic tagging
Kris Youakim, Karin Lind

TL;DR
This paper uses chemo-kinematic tagging with dimensionality reduction to identify and analyze substructures in the Milky Way halo, revealing known and new accretion features and their origins.
Contribution
It introduces a chemo-kinematic clustering method using t-SNE to detect and associate stellar structures in the Milky Way halo, including new insights into their origins.
Findings
Recovered major known structures like GSE, Thamnos, Sequoia, and others.
Found 44% of globular clusters likely have an accreted origin.
Linked the Orphan-Chenab stream with the Grus II dwarf galaxy.
Abstract
The Milky Way halo has been built-up over cosmic time through the accretion and dissolution of star clusters and dwarf galaxies as well as through their complex interactions with the Galactic disc. Traces of these accreted structures persist to the present day in the chemical and kinematic properties of stars and their orbits and allow for the disentangling of the accretion history of the Galaxy through observations of Milky Way stars. We utilised 6D phase-space information in combination with [Fe/H] measurements to facilitate a clustering analysis of stars using their kinematics and chemistry simultaneously, a technique known as chemo-kinematic tagging. Using t-distributed stochastic neighbour embedding (t-SNE), we performed dimensionality reduction and identify stars from clusters and streams that are co-localised in the kinematic and chemical parameter space. We included E, Jr, Jz,…
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