scholarly journals Discovery of Distant RR Lyrae Stars in the Milky Way Using DECam

2018 ◽  
Vol 855 (1) ◽  
pp. 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gustavo E. Medina ◽  
Ricardo R. Muñoz ◽  
A. Katherina Vivas ◽  
Jeffrey L. Carlin ◽  
Francisco Förster ◽  
...  
2022 ◽  
Vol 258 (1) ◽  
pp. 20
Author(s):  
Iminhaji Ablimit ◽  
Gang Zhao ◽  
Uy. Teklimakan ◽  
Jian-Rong Shi ◽  
Kunduz Abdusalam

Abstract In order to study the Milky Way, RR Lyrae (RRL) variable stars identified by Gaia, ASAS-SN, and ZTF sky survey projects have been analyzed as tracers in this work. Photometric and spectroscopic information of 3417 RRLs including proper motions, radial velocity, and metallcity are obtained from observational data of Gaia, LAMOST, GALAH, APOGEE, and RAVE. Precise distances of RRLs with typical uncertainties less than 3% are derived by using a recent comprehensive period–luminosity–metallicity relation. Our results from kinematical and chemical analysis provide important clues for the assembly history of the Milky Way, especially for the Gaia–Sausage ancient merger. The kinematical and chemical trends found in this work are consistent with those of recent simulations that indicated that the Gaia–Sausage merger had a dual origin in the Galactic thick disk and halo. As recent similar works have found, the halo RRL sample in this work contains a subset of radially biased orbits besides a more isotropic component. This higher orbital anisotropy component amounts to β ≃ 0.8, and it contributes between 42% and 83% of the halo RRLs at 4 < R( kpc) < 20.


2018 ◽  
Vol 483 (2) ◽  
pp. 1737-1743 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richa Kundu ◽  
Dante Minniti ◽  
Harinder P Singh

2019 ◽  
Vol 490 (2) ◽  
pp. 1498-1508
Author(s):  
Nicolas Longeard ◽  
Nicolas Martin ◽  
Rodrigo A Ibata ◽  
Michelle L M Collins ◽  
Benjamin P M Laevens ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We present a photometric and spectroscopic study of the Milky Way satellite Laevens 3. Using MegaCam/Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope $g$ and $i$ photometry and Keck II/DEIMOS multi-object spectroscopy, we refine the structural and stellar properties of the system. The Laevens 3 colour–magnitude diagram shows that it is quite metal-poor, old ($13.0 \pm 1.0$ Gyr), and at a distance of $61.4 \pm 1.0$ kpc, partly based on two RR Lyrae stars. The system is faint ($M_V = -2.8^{+0.2}_{-0.3}$ mag) and compact ($r_h = 11.4 \pm 1.0$ pc). From the spectroscopy, we constrain the systemic metallicity (${\rm [Fe/H]}_\mathrm{spectro} = -1.8 \pm 0.1$ dex) but the metallicity and velocity dispersions are both unresolved. Using Gaia DR2, we infer a mean proper motion of $(\mu _\alpha ^*,\mu _\delta)=(0.51 \pm 0.28,-0.83 \pm 0.27)$ mas yr−1, which, combined with the system’s radial velocity ($\langle v_r\rangle = -70.2 \pm 0.5 {\rm \, km \,\, s^{-1}}$), translates into a halo orbit with a pericenter and apocenter of $40.7 ^{+5.6}_{-14.7}$ and $85.6^{+17.2}_{-5.9}$ kpc, respectively. Overall, Laevens 3 shares the typical properties of the Milky Way’s outer halo globular clusters. Furthermore, we find that this system shows signs of mass segregation that strengthens our conclusion that Laevens 3 is a globular cluster.


2020 ◽  
Vol 641 ◽  
pp. A96 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Savino ◽  
A. Koch ◽  
Z. Prudil ◽  
A. Kunder ◽  
R. Smolec

The central kiloparsecs of the Milky Way are known to host an old, spheroidal stellar population, whose spatial and kinematical properties set it apart from the boxy-peanut structure that constitutes most of the central stellar mass. The nature of this spheroidal population, whether it is a small classical bulge, the innermost stellar halo, or a population of disk stars with large initial velocity dispersion, remains unclear. This structure is also a promising candidate to play host to some of the oldest stars in the Galaxy. Here we address the topic of the inner stellar spheroid age, using spectroscopic and photometric metallicities for a sample of 935 RR Lyrae stars that are constituents of this component. By means of stellar population synthesis, we derive an age-metallicity relation for RR Lyrae populations. We infer, for the RR Lyrae stars in the bulge spheroid, an extremely ancient age of 13.41 ± 0.54 Gyr and conclude they were among the first stars to form in what is now the Milky Way galaxy. Our age estimate for the central spheroid shows a remarkable agreement with the age profile that has been inferred for the Milky Way stellar halo, suggesting a connection between the two structures. However, we find mild evidence for a transition in the halo properties at rGC ∼ 5 kpc. We also investigate formation scenarios for metal-rich RR Lyrae stars, such as binarity and helium variations, and consider whether they can provide alternative explanations for the properties of our sample. We conclude that within our framework, the only viable alternative is to have younger, slightly helium-rich, RR Lyrae stars. This is a hypothesis that would open intriguing questions for the formation of the inner stellar spheroid.


2016 ◽  
Vol 830 (1) ◽  
pp. L14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dante Minniti ◽  
Rodrigo Contreras Ramos ◽  
Manuela Zoccali ◽  
Marina Rejkuba ◽  
Oscar A. Gonzalez ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 492 (2) ◽  
pp. 2161-2176 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Zinn ◽  
X Chen ◽  
A C Layden ◽  
D I Casetti-Dinescu

ABSTRACT Measurements of [Fe/H] and radial velocity are presented for 89 RR Lyrae (RRL) candidates within 6 kpc of the Sun. After the removal of two suspected non-RRLs, these stars were added to an existing data base, which yielded 464 RRLs with [Fe/H] on a homogeneous scale. Using data from the Gaia satellite (Data Release 2), we calculated the positions and space velocities for this sample. These data confirm the existence of a thin disc of RRL with [α/Fe] ∼ solar. The majority of the halo RRLs with large total energies have near-zero angular momenta about the Z-axis. Kinematically, these stars closely resemble the Gaia-Sausage/Gaia-Enceladus stars that others have proposed are debris from the merger of a large galaxy with the Milky Way. The metallicity and period distributions of the RRLs and their positions in the period–amplitude diagram suggest that this disrupted galaxy was as massive as the Large Magellanic Cloud and possibly greater.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (S334) ◽  
pp. 185-188
Author(s):  
Allyson A. Sheffield ◽  
Kathryn V. Johnston ◽  
Adrian M. Price-Whelan ◽  
Anastasios Tzanidakis ◽  
Chervin F. P. Laporte ◽  
...  

AbstractWe present preliminary results from a study exploring the origin of Milky Way substructures, and show initial evidence of a common “kicked-out” formation mechanism for two low-latitude substructures. In this scenario, stars in these substructures formed in the disk and were subsequently “kicked-out” by an external perturbation, such as the merger of an accreted satellite, which created an oscillation in the Galactic disk. To test this origin scenario, we found the fraction of different stellar populations – M giants and RR Lyrae stars – in the Monoceros Ring (also known as GASS) and A13, supplementing a study of stellar populations in the Triangulum-Andromeda cloud. This work provides: (1) the first analysis of the GASS and A13 features based upon their stellar populations; and (2) preliminary evidence of disk stars in the Milky Way that have been relocated to the disk-halo interface due to vertical oscillations of the Milky Way’s disk.


2020 ◽  
Vol 501 (2) ◽  
pp. 2279-2304
Author(s):  
Eugene Vasiliev ◽  
Vasily Belokurov ◽  
Denis Erkal

ABSTRACT We assemble a catalogue of candidate Sagittarius stream members with 5D and 6D phase-space information, using astrometric data from Gaia DR2, distances estimated from RR Lyrae stars, and line-of-sight velocities from various spectroscopic surveys. We find a clear misalignment between the stream track and the direction of the reflex-corrected proper motions in the leading arm of the stream, which we interpret as a signature of a time-dependent perturbation of the gravitational potential. A likely cause of this perturbation is the recent passage of the most massive Milky Way satellite – the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We develop novel methods for simulating the Sagittarius stream in the presence of the LMC, using specially tailored N-body simulations and a flexible parametrization of the Milky Way halo density profile. We find that while models without the LMC can fit most stream features rather well, they fail to reproduce the misalignment and overestimate the distance to the leading arm apocentre. On the other hand, models with an LMC mass in the range $(1.3\pm 0.3)\times 10^{11}\, \mathrm{M}_\odot$ rectify these deficiencies. We demonstrate that the stream can not be modelled adequately in a static Milky Way. Instead, our Galaxy is required to lurch toward the massive in-falling Cloud, giving the Sgr stream its peculiar shape and kinematics. By exploring the parameter space of Milky Way potentials, we determine the enclosed mass within 100 kpc to be $(5.6\pm 0.4)\times 10^{11}\, \mathrm{M}_\odot$, and the virial mass to be $(9.0\pm 1.3)\times 10^{11}\, \mathrm{M}_\odot$, and find tentative evidence for a radially-varying shape and orientation of the Galactic halo.


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