Tracing Kinematic and Chemical Properties of Sagittarius Stream by K-Giants, M-Giants, and BHB stars
Abstract
We characterize the kinematic and chemical properties of 3,000 Sagittarius (Sgr) stream stars, including K-giants, M-giants, and BHBs, select from SEGUE-2, LAMOST, and SDSS separately in Integrals-of-Motion space. The orbit of Sgr stream is quite clear from the velocity vector in X-Z plane. Stars traced by K-giants and M-giants present the apogalacticon of trailing steam is 100 kpc. The metallicity distributions of Sgr K-, M-giants, and BHBs present that the M-giants are on average the most metal-rich population, followed by K-giants and BHBs. All of the K-, M-giants, and BHBs indicate that the trailing arm is on average more metal-rich than leading arm, and the K-giants show that the Sgr debris is the most metal-poor part. The α-abundance of Sgr stars exhibits a similar trend with the Galactic halo stars at lower metallicity ([Fe/H] < -1.0 dex), and then evolve down to lower [α/Fe] than disk stars at higher metallicity, which is close to the evolution pattern of α-element of Milky Way dwarf galaxies. We find VY and metallicity of K-giants have gradients along the direction of line-of-sight from the Galactic center in X-Z plane, and the K-giants show that VY increases with metallicity at [Fe/H] >-1.5 dex. After dividing the Sgr stream into bright and faint stream according to their locations in equatorial coordinate, the K-giants and BHBs show that the bright and faint stream present different VY and metallicities, the bright stream is on average higher in VY and metallicity than the faint stream.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.