4.7 Article

Galactic Archeology with the AEGIS Survey: The Evolution of Carbon and Iron in the Galactic Halo

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 861, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aaccea

Keywords

catalogs; Galaxy: formation; Galaxy: halo; Galaxy: structure; stars: abundances; stars: carbon

Funding

  1. Physics Frontier Center/JINA Center for the Evolution of the Elements (JINA-CEE) [PHY 14-30152]
  2. US National Science Foundation
  3. National Research Foundation of Korea - Ministry of Science and ICT [2017R1A5A1070354, NRF-2015R1C1A1A02036658, NRF-2018R1A2B6003961]
  4. Australian Research Council [DP0878137, DP12010237]
  5. STFC postdoctoral fellowship at the ICC, Durham
  6. National Research Foundation of Korea [2017R1A5A1070354] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Understanding the evolution of carbon and iron in the Milky Way's halo is of importance because these two elements play crucial roles in constraining star formation, Galactic assembly, and chemical evolution in the early universe. Here we explore the spatial distributions of the carbonicity, [C/Fe], and metallicity, [Fe/H], of the halo system based on medium-resolution (R similar to 1300)spectroscopy of similar to 58,000 stars in the southern hemisphere from the AAOmega Evolution of Galactic Structure (AEGIS) survey. The AEGIS carbonicity map exhibits a positive gradient with distance, as similarly found for the Sloan Digital Sky Survey carbonicity map of Lee et al. The metallicity map confirms that [Fe/H] decreases with distance from the inner halo to the outer halo. We also explore the formation and chemical evolution history of the halo by considering the populations of carbon-enhanced metalpoor (CEMP) stars present in the AEGIS sample. The cumulative and differential frequency of CEMP-no stars (as classified by their characteristically lower levels of absolute carbon abundance, A(C) <= 7.1, for subgiants and giants) increases with decreasing metallicity and is substantially higher than previous determinations for CEMP stars as a whole. In contrast, that of CEMP-s stars (with higher A(C)) remains almost flat, at a value of similar to 10% in the range -4.0 less than or similar to [Fe/H] less than or similar to -2.0. The distinctly different behaviors of the CEMP-no and CEMP-s stars relieve the tension with population synthesis models assuming a binary mass-transfer origin, which previously struggled to account for the higher reported frequencies of CEMP stars, taken as a whole, at low metallicity.

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