Formation of the Galactic Halo

Abstract

Recent observational and theoretical work suggests that the formation of the Galactic stellar halo involved both dissipative processes and the accretion of subfragments. With present data, the fraction of the halo for which an accretion origin can be substantiated is small, of order 10 percent. The kinematics of the best halo field star samples show evidence for both dissipative and dissipationless formation processes. Models of star-forming dissipative collapse, in a cosmological context and including feedback from star formation, do not confirm the simple relations between metallicity, rotation velocity, and orbital eccentricity for halo stars as originally predicted. The new model predictions are much closer to the observed distributions, which have generally been interpreted as evidence for an accretion origin. These results are broadly consistent with a hierarchical galaxy formation model, but the details remain to be worked out.

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