The origin of accreted stellar halo populations in the Milky Way using APOGEE, $\textit{Gaia}$, and the EAGLE simulations [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1808.00968


It has recently become apparent that a large component of the nearby Galactic halo may be formed from a single massive accretion event. Here, we study APOGEE DR14 element abundances and $\textit{Gaia}$ DR2 kinematics of stars associated with the accreted stellar halo. We show that the nearby halo has many stars with high orbital eccentricities ($e\gtrsim0.8$), whose abundances differ from that of their low $e$ counterparts. High $e$ stars exhibit abundance patterns typical of massive Milky Way dwarf galaxy satellites today, characterised by low [Mg/Fe], [Al/Fe], and [Ni/Fe]. The [Mg/Fe]-[Fe/H] trend of high $e$ stars shows a change of slope at [Fe/H]$\sim-1.3$, also characteristic of chemical evolution in relatively massive dwarf galaxies. Low $e$ stars do not show a significant break in the same [Fe/H] range, and exhibit slightly higher abundances of Mg, Al and Ni. Other kinematical properties of the high and low $e$ stars also differ, with the former exhibiting slightly retrograde motion, higher vertical excursions, and larger apocentre radii. We use the EAGLE suite of cosmological simulations to show that the high $e$ population likely results from the accretion of a satellite with $10^{8}\lesssim M_*\lesssim 10^{9}\mathrm{M_\odot}$, at $z\lesssim1.5$. The simulations further suggest that accretion events like this are a rare occurrence in the evolutionary history of Milky Way-like galaxies. In addition, we examine how eccentricity changes over time in accreted stellar debris, finding that median $e$ is largely unchanged since merger time. The exact nature of the low $e$ population is unclear, but we hypothesise that it is likely a combination of $\textit{in situ}$ star formation, high $|z|$ disc stars, lower mass accretion events, and contamination by the low $e$ tail of the high $e$ population.

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J. Mackereth, R. Schiavon, J. Pfeffer, et. al.
Mon, 6 Aug 18
3/33

Comments: 15 Pages, 10 Figures, Submitted to MNRAS