The Pristine survey: XXVII. The extremely metal-poor stream C-19 stretches over more than 100 degrees

Abstract

The discovery of the most metal-poor stream, C-19, provides us with a fossil record of a stellar structure born very soon after the Big Bang. In this work, we search for new C-19 members over the whole sky by combining two complementary stream-searching algorithms, STREAMFINDER and StarGO,, and utilizing low-metallicity star samples from the Pristine survey as well as Gaia BP/RP spectro-photometric catalogues. We confirm twelve new members, spread over more than 100, using velocity and metallicity information from a set of spectroscopic follow-up programs that targeted a quasi-complete sample of our bright candidates (G 16.0). From the updated set of stream members, we confirm that the stream is wide, with a stream width of 200 pc, and dynamically hot, with a derived velocity dispersion of 10.9+2.1-1.5 km/s. The tension remains between these quantities and a purely baryonic scenario in which the relatively low-mass stream (even updated to a few 104M) stems from a globular cluster progenitor, as suggested by its chemical abundances. Some heating mechanism, such as preheating of the cluster in its own dark matter halo or through interactions with halo sub-structures appears necessary to explain the tension. The impact of binaries on the measured dispersion also remains unknown. Detailed elemental abundances of more stream members as well as multi-epoch radial velocities from spectroscopic observations are therefore crucial to fully understand the nature and past history of the most metal-poor stream of the Milky Way.

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