Chemical Abundances, Dwarf Spheroidals and Tidal Streams Steven Majewski (University of Virginia) Principal Collaborators: Mei-Yin Chou (UVa - Ph.D. thesis),

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chemical Cartography with SDSS/APOGEE Michael Hayden (NMSU), Jo Bovy (IAS), Steve Majewski (UVa), Jennifer Johnson (OSU), Gail Zasowski (JHU), Leo Girardi.
Advertisements

Spectroscopic Studies: Galactic Disk Populations
T.P. Idiart  and J.A. de Freitas Pacheco   Universidade de São Paulo (Brasil)  Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur (France) Introduction Elliptical galaxies.
Effects of Non-Solar Abundance Ratios on Star Spectra: Comparison of Observations and Models. Overview:-  Importance of element abundances  New measurements.
Chemistry and Dynamics of Stars in Low Mass Galaxies Bridging Dwarfs, Halos & Disks Kim Venn U. Victoria 22 July 2010.
Assembling the Milky Way David Spergel. What has changed? Context: – Standard cosmological model – No galaxy is an island… (John Dunne vs. Immanuel Kant)
Martin Asplund Galactic archeology & planet formation.
Tidal Streams in the Milky Way (and M31) Jorge Peñarrubia (University of Victoria, Canada) & David Martinez Delgado (IAC, Spain) 22th of June 2006 Valencia.
Tidal Disruption of Globular Clusters in Dwarf Galaxies J. Peñarrubia Santiago 2011 in collaboration with: M.Walker; G. Gilmore & S. Koposov.
Dwarf Galaxies and Their Destruction... Marla Geha Carnegie Observatories (OCIW) Collaborators: P. Guhathakurta (UCSC), R. van der Marel (STScI)
Unveiling the formation of the Galactic disks and Andromeda halo with WFMOS Masashi Chiba (Tohoku University, Sendai)
HERMES: Deciphering the Milky Way’s History Daniel Zucker with Gayandhi de Silva and the HERMES team.
The Milky Way PHYS390 Astrophysics Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 19.
and the LMC as a Dwarf Galaxy “Cue-ball”
The Milky Way Galaxy 19 April 2005 AST 2010: Chapter 24.
Center for Stellar and Planetary Astrophysics Monash University Summary prepared by John Lattanzio Abundances in M71.
1 Exploring the origin of the stellar halo of the Milky Way Eric Bell Ann Arbor 29 July 2009 Eric Bell Ann Arbor 29 July 2009.
Construction and Evolution of the Galaxy Where do the dwarf galaxies fit in? Matthew Shetrone February 26, 2009.
Galaxy Formation and Evolution Galactic Archaeology Chris Brook Modulo 15 Room 509
Thick Disk Formation Chris Brook, Hugo Martel, Vincent Veilleux Université Laval Brad Gibson Swinburne University, Melbourne, Australia Daisuke Kawata.
The Milky Way Disk and the LAMOST survey Jinliang HOU Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, CAS Workshop on Galactic Studies with the LAMOST Survey KIAA-PKU,
Exploring the orbits of the stars from a blind chemical tagging experiment Borja Anguiano Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
1 Galactic Science and MOS on the WHT Amina Helmi.
The Dual Origin of a Simulated Milky Way Halo Adi Zolotov (N.Y.U.), Beth Willman (Haverford), Fabio Governato, Chris Brook (University of Washington, Seattle),
Seattle University and APO Joanne Hughes Department of Physics.
NGC 2419 – the most bizarre Galactic globular cluster Judith Cohen (Caltech) & Evan Kirby (UC Irvine/Caltech) Conference: Small Stellar Systems, Tuscany,
Introduction Ken Freeman Australian National University Monash 20 Jan, 2014.
The Metal-Poor Halo of the Andromeda Spiral Galaxy Jason Kalirai (University of California at Santa Cruz) Hubble Fellows Symposium, Baltimore MD April.
8th Sino-German Workshop Kunming, Feb 23-28, 2009 Milky Way vs. M31: a Tale of Two Disks Jinliang HOU In collaboration with : Ruixiang CHANG, Shiyin SHEN,
化学組成に刻まれた Ia 型超新星の多様 性 辻本拓司 ( 国立天文台 )  chemical imprint on stars of supernova nucleosynthesis in general, the issue about Type II supernovae  prompt.
High Resolution Spectroscopy of Stars with Planets Won-Seok Kang Seoul National University Sang-Gak Lee, Seoul National University Kang-Min.
Stellar Populations Science Knut Olsen. The Star Formation Histories of Disk Galaxies Context – Hierarchical structure formation does an excellent job.
Chapter 16 – Chemical Analysis Review of curves of growth –The linear part: The width is set by the thermal width Eqw is proportional to abundance –The.
Chemical Cartography with SDSS/APOGEE Michael Hayden (NMSU), Jo Bovy (IAS), Steve Majewski (UVa), Jennifer Johnson (OSU), Gail Zasowski (JHU), Leo Girardi.
IAS, June 2008 Caty Pilachowski. Visible in the Southern Sky Listed in Ptolemy's catalog Discovered by Edmond Halley in 1677 –non-stellar –"luminous spot.
'Sculptor'-ing the Galaxy? Doug Geisler, Universidad de Concepción Verne Smith, UTEP George Wallerstein, U Washington Guillermo Gonzalez, ISU Corinne Charbonnel,
1 / 17 The Elemental Abundance Distributions of Milky Way Satellite Galaxies Evan Kirby (HF09) Caltech Small Magellanic Cloud, HST/ACS credit: NASA, ESA,
Oscar A. Gonzalez PhD ESO-Garching 3rd Subaru conference: Galactic Archaeology, Deep field and the formation of the Milky Way, Japan, 2011.
Multiple stellar populations and the horizontal branch of globular clusters Raffaele Gratton INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova.
Diaspora in Cercetarea Stiintifica Bucuresti, Sept The Milky Way and its Satellite System in 3D Velocity Space: Its Place in the Current Cosmological.
Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies Orbiting the Milky Way Edward W Olszewski, Steward Obs.
Comprehensive Stellar Population Models and the Disentanglement of Age and Metallicity Effects Guy Worthey 1994, ApJS, 95, 107.
The Star Formation Histories of Red Sequence Galaxies Mike Hudson U. Waterloo / IAP Steve Allanson (Waterloo) Allanson, MH et al 09, ApJ 702, 1275 Russell.
Modelling the Stellar Populations of The Milky Way and Andromeda Collaborators: Theory:Observations: Kathryn Johnston (Columbia) Annette Ferguson (Edinburgh)
E. K. Grebel Globular Clusters: The Dwarf Galaxy Contribution1 Globular Clusters: The Dwarf Galaxy Contribution Eva K. Grebel Astronomisches Rechen-Institut.
Galactic structure and star counts Du cuihua BATC meeting, NAOC.
Dr. Alan Alves-Brito ARC Super Science Fellow Red giant stars as tracers of the chemical evolution of the Galactic bulge.
Why do globular clusters have more than one main sequence? Ref: Gratton et al. 2012, A&ARv, 20, 50.
Galactic Archaeology: The Lowest Metallicity Stars Timothy C. Beers Department of Physics & Astronomy Michigan State University & JINA: Joint Institute.
Galactic Archaeology wishy-washy Nobuo Arimoto NAOJ.
The Gaia-ESO Survey Sofia Randich INAF-Arcetri Survey Co-PIs: Gerry Gilmore & Sofia Randich 350+ Co-Is (mostly from Europe, but not only) 90++ institutes.
52 0 Congresso SAIT - Teramo 2008 The Globular Clusters of the Large Magellanic Cloud : chemical abundances and ages Alessio Mucciarelli Università di.
Chemical Evolution Models forDwarf Spheroidal Galaxies Gustavo A. Lanfranchi Núcleo de Astrofísica Teórica - Universidade Cruzeiro do Sul Chemical evolution.
Stellar Spectroscopy and Elemental Abundances Definitions Solar Abundances Relative Abundances Origin of Elements 1.
Study of the type IIP supernova 2008gz Roy et al. 2011, MNRAS accepted.
Tuesday Summary Clusters - Galaxy assembly history through cosmological simulations can form bimodal cluster distributions. - Universal shape of the joint.
A Method for Obtaining Detailed Abundances of Extragalactic Globular Clusters w/ Andy McWilliam (Carnegie Obs.) Scott Cameron, Janet Collucci (UM) MW-
Galactic Structure and Near-field Cosmology via Astrometry with ODI Dana Casetti, Terry Girard, Bill van Altena - Yale Orbits of MW: satellites satellites.
Determining Ages of APOGEE Giants with Known Distances Diane Feuillet New Mexico State University Jon Holtzman, Jo Bovy, Leo Girardi The APOGEE Team.
Gaia ITNG2013 School, Tenerife Ken Freeman, Lecture 4: the stellar halo September 2013.
Holtzman: General interests ● Stellar populations – Solar neighborhood star formation history – Local group dwarf star formation histories – M33 star formation.
Thick disks in galaxies External galaxies: NGC 4565, van der Kruit and Searle 1981 Milky Way: Gilmore and Reid 1983.
Stellar Populations Science Knut Olsen. The Star Formation Histories of Disk Galaxies Context – Hierarchical structure formation does an excellent job.
Adding the s-Process to APOGEE Stellar Populations: - Evolving the Line List - Pushing to the M-dwarfs Verne V. Smith (NOAO) Katia Cunha, Matthew Shetrone,
Disentangling the stellar components of the metal-poor Milky Way
Peculiar Massive Globular Clusters in the Milky Way
Abundance gradient in Local Group galaxies using AGB stars
Y. Katsuta1), T. Suda1,2), S. Yamada1), N. Nishimura3),
Galactic Astronomy 銀河物理学特論 I Lecture 3-4: Chemical evolution of galaxies Seminar: Erb et al. 2006, ApJ, 644, 813 Lecture: 2012/01/23.
Modeling the Extended Structure of Dwarf Spheroidals (Carina, Leo I)
Presentation transcript:

Chemical Abundances, Dwarf Spheroidals and Tidal Streams Steven Majewski (University of Virginia) Principal Collaborators: Mei-Yin Chou (UVa - Ph.D. thesis), Katia Cunha, Verne Smith (NOAO), David Martínez-Delgado (IAC), David Law (UCLA), Jeffrey Carlin (UVa - Ph.D. thesis), Ricardo Munoz (Yale) Image credit: David Law & SRM

Topics Discussed: 1.Some Motivations to Study Chemistry of Tidal Streams Connection between dSphs and stars in the MW halo. Reconstruct chemical distribution of original satellite galaxies. Learn about SFHs, chemical enrichment histories, accretion histories. Chemical fingerprinting stars to their parent source. 2. Case Study: MDF Variation along the Sgr Stream Find a strong metallicity gradient along the Sgr tidal tail. Shows that Sgr originally had significant radial metallicity gradient. 3. Case Study: Chemical Patterns in the Sgr System Find relative chemical evolution/SFH between Sgr, MW & other satellites. Use distinctive patterns to fingerprint other Sgr stars in Galactic halo. 4. Case Study: Fingerprinting the Tri-And Star Cloud Testing the connection to the Monoceros stream. 5. The Future with New Surveys: Comments about APOGEE

Font et al. (2006) Hierarchical Formation of Halos Today ~1 stream with  < 30 mag/arcsec 2 attached to still-bound satellite should be visible per MW-like galaxy. (Johnston et al., in prep.)

Prominent Tidal Streams around Disk Galaxies NGC 5907 Sgr Model (Law et al. 2005) Martinez-Delgado, Gabany et al. (2008, 2009) Milky Way NGC 4013

Distinctive abundance patterns-- [α/Fe], s-process (Y, La, etc.) -- reflect the unique chemical history of the parent system, e.g., [α/Fe] (Ti, Mg, O, etc.) indicates the Type II/Type Ia SNe ratio of the parent system Chemical Histories Distinctive abundance patterns-- [α/Fe], s-process (Y, La, etc.) -- reflect the unique chemical history of the parent system, e.g., [α/Fe] (Ti, Mg, O, etc.) indicates the Type II/Type Ia SNe ratio of the parent system From McWilliam (1997)

1) dSphs appear to differ from MW halo (and even from each other) 2) Chemical fingerprinting (e.g., Freeman & Bland-Hawthorn “tagging”) may possibly connect field stars to dSph progenitors Chemical Histories: The MW Halo / dSph (Dis?)Connection dSph stars Halo Thick disk Thin disk Compilation from Venn et al. (2004)

Explaining the Halo/dSph Chemical Dichotomy Font et al. (2006), Robertson et al. (2005): Bulk of halo from massive, Magellanic Cloud-sized accreted early on, when chemistry dominated by SNII.

Explaining the Halo/dSph Chemical Dichotomy Majewski et al. (2002), Munoz et al. (2006, 2008): Satellites with prolonged chemical evolution and tidal disruption naturally leads to evolution in types of stars contributed to MW halo.

Results in Chou et al Results in Chou et al. 2007, ApJ, 670, 346, Chou et al (~submitted), High resolution, high S/N (50-200) spectroscopy of 2MASS-selected M giants in Sgr and its stream. 31 stars from KPNO 4-m (R~ 35000) 12 stars from TNG 3.5-m (R~ 45000) 16 stars from Magellan 6.5-m (R~ 19000) Use of predominantly northern telescopes leads to focus on the leading arm. Chemical Study of the Sgr dSph + Tidal Stream

Derivation of Abundances: MOOG (Sneden 1973): An LTE Stellar Line Analysis Program MOOG [Fe/H] and [x/Fe] Model Atmosphere Line List - T eff from J-K (Houdashelt et al. 2000) - log g from isochrone (Girardi et al. 2000) - Initial metallicity guess EW measurements If the output [Fe/H] not consistent R~ log Teff log g Ti

The expected dynamical age of debris along the tidal stream: Stars lost from Sgr: 1 orbit ago; ~0.5 Gyr 2 orbits ago; ~1.4 Gyr 3 orbits ago; ~2.2 Gyr 4 orbits ago; ~3.1 Gyr 1 radial period ~ 0.85 Gyr Model (Law et al. 2005)

Sgr Leading Arms and an NGP Moving Group Brightest stars (K< 10) in: Sgr core Leading arm north (lost ~ 2 Gyrs ago) Leading arm south (lost ~ 3 Gyrs ago) Also, peculiar group of ‘NGP’ M giant stars having radial velocities different from the main leading arm trend

Iron Abundance Analysis: 11 Fe I lines in a narrow spectral window ~ Å (Smith & Lambert 1985, 1986, 1990) LTE code MOOG combined with a Kurucz ATLAS9 (1994) solar model Solar gf-values of Fe I lines R ~ R ~ R ~ 19000

Strong Metallicity Gradient along the tidal tail! Chemical differences between the core and the tails! Median [Fe/H] of NGP group is similar to Sgr leading arm south (Chou et al. 2007, ApJ, 670, 346) Time dependence in the chemistry of stars contributed to halo. No MW dSph shows a metallicity gradient this strong -- e.g., largest is 0.5 dex variation across Sculptor (Tolstoy et al. 2004) Either Sgr lost mass over a small radial range with enormous gradient… …or suffered a catastrophic loss with stars lost over a more normal gradient.

Reconstructed MDF of Sgr core several Gyrs ago Relatively flat, more metal-poor than presently in the Sgr core The observed chemical properties of the presently surviving satellites may depend on their tidal stripping history MDF of Sgr core MDF of Sgr tails MDF of Sgr core MDF of Sgr tails Sum

Chemical Distributions in Sgr Stream [Ti/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] Crosses are MW stars from Gratton, R. G. & Sneden, C. (1994), Fulbright, J. P. (2002), Johnson, J. (2002), and Reddy, B. E. et al. (2003) Triangles are dSph stars from Shetrone et al. (2001 & 2003), Geisler et al. (2005), Sadakane et al. (2004) [Fe/H] Sgr resembles LMC more than other dSphs LMC stars from Pompéia et al. (2008)

Chemical Distributions in Sgr Stream [Y/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] Sgr resembles LMC more than other dSphs YII

Chemical Distributions in Sgr Stream [La/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] Here Sgr differs a little from LMC La II line affected by hyperfine splitting

Chemical Distributions in Sgr Stream [La/Y] vs. [Fe/H] – metal-poor AGB produce high [hs / ls], means slower SFR than MW Sgr resembles LMC Sgr evolved faster than dSph, slower than MW

+1 dex dSphs +0.5 dex LMC Clear SFR difference among dSphs, LMC and Sgr Similar Enrichment, Different Timescales Hypothetical differences in chemical history

SFR differs in Galactic satellites SFR slow to fast: dSphs  LMC  Sgr  MW +1 dex dSphs +0.5 dex LMC Hypothetical differences in chemical history A “universal” enrichment history varying only by rate??

Chemical Fingerprinting: What is the peculiar NGP group? [Fe/H] ~ -1, similar to Sgr leading arm south (dynamical age ~ 3 Gyrs) [Ti/Fe], [Y/Fe], [La/Fe] and [La/Y] resemble Sgr leading arm south Suggests NGP stars are Sgr stars of same dynamical age as leading arm south, but dynamics wrong for leading arm Proposed solution: NGP group are Sgr trailing arm stars overlapping with Sgr leading arm north

Future Work on Sagittarius Metallicity gradient and chemical trends along the Sgr trailing arm Longer, and stars stripped at specific epoch can be more cleanly isolated. Gemini Phoenix (R~40k) H-band spectra Model (Law et al. 2005) 10 stars in each region from Gemini South 7+2 in these regions

Note that dynamically oldest of the Sgr stream stars are  -enhanced -- but contributed within past few Gyr

Explaining the Halo/dSph Chemical Dichotomy Font et al. (2006): Satellites accreted >9 Gyr ago all destroyed, surviving satellites only recently accreted --> implies not major contributors Sgr exceptionary case? (e.g., only dSph presently in inner halo)

Carina Munoz et al. (2007, in prep.) Koch et al. (2008) But Carina dSph is also contributing stars today… … undoubtedly some with  -enhancement. … undoubtedly some with  -enhancement.

Slide removed (Work In Progress)

30 The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) APOGEE at a Glance Bright time 2011-Q2 to 2014-Q2, co-observing with MARVELS 300 fiber, R ~ 24,000 cryogenic spectrograph H-band window (  ) Minimum S/N = 100 Typical RV uncertainty < 0.5 km/s 0.1 dex precision abundances for ~15 chemical elements ~10 5, 2MASS-selected, giant stars probing all Galactic populations

Expected elements and S/N R=21k and 0.1 dex precision precision will degrade for lower S/N S/N=100 for faintest star in plugboard, higher S/N for brighter stars Element SNR/pix SNR/pix SNR/pix [Fe/H]=-2 [Fe/H]=-1[Fe/H]=0 Na S V K Mn Ni Ca Al Si N Ti Mg Fe C O ”Must have” element “Important to have/very desirable” element “Nice to have” element (also not shown Cr, Co)

The Promise of Detailed Chemical Abundance Studies Relative abundances of different  elements reflects mass of SN progenitors: Probes IMF (e.g., McWilliam & Rich 1997 differences in  elements for bulge --- on right, above) The Initial Mass Function [(Si+Ca) / Fe] [(Mg+Ti) / Fe]

MARVELS Coordination - APOGEE use of 30 hr fields Solar metallicity RGB tip star: int (hr) H lim A V d(kpc) [Fe/H]= -1.5 RGB tip star: int (hr) H lim A V d(kpc)

Summary: Sgr Stream shows strong metallicity gradient Sgr originally had strong to very strong radial metallicity gradient. Recent tidal stripping released stars, producing observed gradient in tails. Sgr core of today differs from Sgr core of “yester-Gyrs”. Sgr recently contributed  -enhanced, metal-poor stars to MW; possibly other dSphs as well (e.g., Carina). Overall, abundance patterns along the stream are distinct from the dSphs and MW, similar to LMC  SFR differences: dSphs  LMC  Sgr  MW (slower faster) Application of chemical fingerprinting demonstrated. Tri-And Star Cloud not chemically linked to Monoceros. APOGEE will access ~10-15 chemical elements in streams.