2020A&A...637A..98H


Query : 2020A&A...637A..98H

2020A&A...637A..98H - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 637A, 98-98 (2020/5-1)

Purveyors of fine halos. II. Chemodynamical association of halo stars with Milky Way globular clusters.

HANKE M., KOCH A., PRUDIL Z., GREBEL E.K. and BASTIAN U.

Abstract (from CDS):

A long-lasting open question in the field of Galactic archeology refers to the size of the contribution from former globular cluster (GC) stars to the formation of the stellar halo of the Milky Way. We contribute to answering this important question by establishing observational links between the present-day halo field star population and GCs. To this end, we combined astrometric information such as space motions and parallaxes from the second data release of the Gaia mission (Gaia DR2) with spectroscopic radial velocities and metallicities ([Fe/H]) from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-IV, DR14) to end up with a seven-dimensional chemodynamical information space for more than 3x105 stars. Moreover, from our previous study, we incorporated the sample of halo giant stars with a distinct chemical signature (strong CN bandheads) that resembles the light-elements anomaly otherwise only seen in the second generation of globular cluster stellar populations. Using three different tagging techniques - among which is the exploration of conservative integrals of motion - we are able to establish unique associations between 151 extratidal stars in the neighborhood of eight GCs, which coincide with earlier findings of stellar envelopes beyond the tidal radius and even beyond (out to several tens of tidal radii). In addition, we trace the possible origin of about 62% of the sample of CN-strong giants to their potential host clusters. We find a connection between several of the involved GCs and the Gaia-Enceladus and Sequoia merger events. By establishing kinematic and chemical connections between 17 CN-strong stars and their surrounding fields, we identify co-moving groups of stars at the same [Fe/H] with a possible cluster origin. Some of these associations contain RR Lyrae variables, which allows meaningful distance inferences to be made. From these, we find strong evidence that four CN-strong stars and their associates are connected to the Sagittarius stream whilst their tightly confined [Fe/H] may hint to a birth site in M 54, the massive cluster in Sagittarius' core remnant. Finally, by employing the counts of CN-strong and bona-fide CN-normal giants from our novel sample, we provide tentative estimates for the fraction of first-generation cluster stars among all stars lost to the halo. In the immediate cluster vicinity, this value amounts to 50.0±16.7% while the associations in the halo field rather imply 80.2–5.2+4.9%. We speculate that - if proven real by spectroscopic follow-up - the disparity between these numbers could indicate a major contribution of low-mass clusters to the overall number of stars escaped to the halo or could alternatively suggest strong mass loss from the first generation during early cluster dissolution.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2020

Journal keyword(s): stars: carbon - stars: statistics - Galaxy: formation - globular clusters: general - Galaxy: halo - Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/A+A/637/A98): tablec1.dat tablec3.dat>

Status at CDS : All or part of tables of objects could be ingested in SIMBAD with priority 2.

Simbad objects: 66

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Number of rows : 66
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 288 GlC 00 52 45.24 -26 34 57.4   10 8.13     ~ 1042 0
2 NGC 362 GlC 01 03 14.26 -70 50 55.6     6.58     ~ 1085 0
3 SDSS J012331.94+071840.7 HB? 01 23 31.9387603680 +07 18 40.777558128           G2 3 0
4 2MASS J01591085-0036504 RG* 01 59 10.8523573032 -00 36 50.468481396           KIII 8 0
5 NAME Sagittarius Stream St* 02 22 +00.0           ~ 874 0
6 NGC 1261 GlC 03 12 16.21 -55 12 58.4     8.63     ~ 520 0
7 SDSS J031452.97+041616.1 RG* 03 14 52.9765435992 +04 16 16.141627596           KIII 4 0
8 NGC 1851 GlC 05 14 06.76 -40 02 47.6           ~ 1430 0
9 M 79 GlC 05 24 10.59 -24 31 27.3     8.16     ~ 817 0
10 NGC 2298 GlC 06 48 59.41 -36 00 19.1     8.89     ~ 497 0
11 2MASS J08342350+1243244 RG* 08 34 23.5120957344 +12 43 24.403923300           F9 5 0
12 SDSS J093306.80+204810.5 RG* 09 33 06.8085521496 +20 48 10.567486656           KIII 4 0
13 SDSS J095223.17+535436.3 * 09 52 23.1736821504 +53 54 36.326066940           F9 2 0
14 NAME Sextans C GlC 10 05 30.96 +00 04 15.4   15.5 13.9     ~ 328 1
15 SDSS J100620.23+141503.6 * 10 06 20.2312815768 +14 15 03.603022884           F9 2 0
16 NGC 3201 GlC 10 17 36.82 -46 24 44.9           ~ 885 0
17 SDSS J110436.09+413950.9 RG* 11 04 36.0969599568 +41 39 50.995276560           G2 4 0
18 GCl 17 GlC 11 29 16.80 +28 58 25.0   14.4       ~ 354 1
19 SDSS J114019.82+273158.1 RG* 11 40 19.8222644376 +27 31 58.154591964           KIII 3 0
20 2MASS J11582653+0430478 RG* 11 58 26.5388737800 +04 30 47.872511496           G2 4 0
21 NGC 4147 GlC 12 10 06.149 +18 32 31.78   11.45 10.74     ~ 573 0
22 2MASS J12102748+1016429 RG* 12 10 27.4824814848 +10 16 42.977752860           F9 3 0
23 SDSS J122428.11+045336.9 * 12 24 28.1225287368 +04 53 37.027038084           G2 2 0
24 C 1235-509 GlC 12 38 40.20 -51 09 01.0           ~ 377 0
25 M 53 GlC 13 12 55.25 +18 10 05.4     7.79     ~ 836 0
26 NGC 5053 GlC 13 16 27.09 +17 42 00.9     9.96     ~ 620 0
27 NGC 5139 GlC 13 26 47.28 -47 28 46.1           ~ 3427 0
28 M 3 GlC 13 42 11.62 +28 22 38.2     6.39     ~ 2479 0
29 NGC 5634 GlC 14 29 37.28 -05 58 35.1   10.69 10.05     ~ 300 0
30 SDSS J145134.72+415036.4 * 14 51 34.7247184440 +41 50 36.420101772           F9 3 0
31 IC 4499 GlC 15 00 18.57 -82 12 49.6     8.56     ~ 351 0
32 NGC 5824 GlC 15 03 58.612 -33 04 06.70   10.28 9.56     ~ 408 0
33 NAME Serpens Dwarf GlC 15 16 05.30 -00 06 41.0   15.1       ~ 734 1
34 M 5 GlC 15 18 33.22 +02 04 51.7     5.95     ~ 1978 0
35 GCl 38 GlC 16 10 59.00 +14 57 42.0           ~ 368 0
36 M 80 GlC 16 17 02.41 -22 58 33.9           ~ 716 0
37 NGC 6139 GlC 16 27 39.987 -38 50 57.03   11.03 9.68     ~ 214 0
38 M 13 GlC 16 41 41.634 +36 27 40.75     5.8     ~ 2193 0
39 NGC 6229 GlC 16 46 58.641 +47 31 36.38   9.38 9.86     ~ 366 0
40 M 10 GlC 16 57 09.05 -04 06 01.1     4.98     ~ 789 0
41 M 19 GlC 17 02 37.69 -26 16 04.6   8.45 5.57     ~ 369 1
42 NGC 6284 GlC 17 04 28.747 -24 45 51.22   10.72 7.43     ~ 278 0
43 NGC 6287 GlC 17 05 09.4906767360 -22 42 28.099250172   11.49 10.30     ~ 224 0
44 M 92 GlC 17 17 07.39 +43 08 09.4     6.52     ~ 2116 0
45 IC 1257 Bz? 17 27 06.00 -07 05 00.0           ~ 87 0
46 NGC 6397 GlC 17 40 42.09 -53 40 27.6     5.17     ~ 1976 0
47 NAME Galactic Center reg 17 45 39.60213 -29 00 22.0000           ~ 14420 0
48 NGC 6535 GlC 18 03 50.51 -00 17 51.5     9.85     ~ 294 0
49 NGC 6544 GlC 18 07 20.58 -24 59 50.4   11.36 9.90     ~ 296 0
50 ESO 280-6 GlC 18 09 06.000 -46 25 24.00           ~ 51 0
51 NGC 6584 GlC 18 18 37.60 -52 12 56.8     8.17     ~ 288 0
52 M 22 GlC 18 36 23.94 -23 54 17.1           ~ 1379 0
53 M 70 GlC 18 43 12.76 -32 17 31.6           ~ 386 0
54 M 54 GlC 18 55 03.33 -30 28 47.5           ~ 1069 0
55 NAME SDG G 18 55 19.0 -30 32 43   4.5 3.6     ~ 2189 2
56 NGC 6752 GlC 19 10 52.11 -59 59 04.4           ~ 2001 0
57 M 56 GlC 19 16 35.57 +30 11 00.5           ~ 422 0
58 M 75 GlC 20 06 04.841 -21 55 20.14     8.26     ~ 366 0
59 NGC 6934 GlC 20 34 11.37 +07 24 16.1           ~ 422 0
60 M 72 GlC 20 53 27.70 -12 32 14.3     8.96     ~ 430 0
61 M 15 GlC 21 29 58.33 +12 10 01.2           ~ 3140 0
62 M 2 GlC 21 33 27.02 -00 49 23.7     6.25     ~ 1030 1
63 NGC 7492 GlC 23 08 26.68 -15 36 41.3     10.48     ~ 301 0
64 NAME Gaia Enceladus-Sausage St* ~ ~           ~ 522 0
65 NAME Local Group GrG ~ ~           ~ 8393 0
66 NAME Galactic Bulge reg ~ ~           ~ 4299 0

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