Literature DB >> 29482193

Two chemically similar stellar overdensities on opposite sides of the plane of the Galactic disk.

Maria Bergemann1, Branimir Sesar2, Judith G Cohen3, Aldo M Serenelli4,5, Allyson Sheffield6, Ting S Li7, Luca Casagrande8,9, Kathryn V Johnston10, Chervin F P Laporte10, Adrian M Price-Whelan11, Ralph Schönrich12, Andrew Gould1,13,14.   

Abstract

Our Galaxy is thought to have an active evolutionary history, dominated over the past ten billion years or so by star formation, the accretion of cold gas and, in particular, the merging of clumps of baryonic and dark matter. The stellar halo-the faint, roughly spherical component of the Galaxy-reveals rich 'fossil' evidence of these interactions, in the form of stellar streams, substructures and chemically distinct stellar components. The effects of interactions with dwarf galaxies on the content and morphology of the Galactic disk are still being explored. Recent studies have identified kinematically distinct stellar substructures and moving groups of stars in our Galaxy, which may have extragalactic origins. There is also mounting evidence that stellar overdensities (regions with greater-than-average stellar density) at the interface between the outer disk and the halo could have been caused by the interaction of a dwarf galaxy with the disk. Here we report a spectroscopic analysis of 14 stars from two stellar overdensities, each lying about five kiloparsecs above or below the Galactic plane-locations suggestive of an association with the stellar halo. We find that the chemical compositions of these two groups of stars are almost identical, both within and between these overdensities, and closely match the abundance patterns of stars in the Galactic disk. We conclude that these stars came from the disk, and that the overdensities that they are part of were created by tidal interactions of the disk with passing or merging dwarf galaxies.

Year:  2018        PMID: 29482193     DOI: 10.1038/nature25490

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  3 in total

1.  Hyperfine structure of the 5d 2DJ states in the alkaline-earth Ba ion by fast-ion-beam laser-rf spectroscopy.

Authors: 
Journal:  Phys Rev A Gen Phys       Date:  1986-03

2.  The Sagittarius impact as an architect of spirality and outer rings in the Milky Way.

Authors:  Chris W Purcell; James S Bullock; Erik J Tollerud; Miguel Rocha; Sukanya Chakrabarti
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-09-14       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Cepheid variables in the flared outer disk of our galaxy.

Authors:  Michael W Feast; John W Menzies; Noriyuki Matsunaga; Patricia A Whitelock
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-05-15       Impact factor: 49.962

  3 in total

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