No Arabic abstract
Based on the [Fe/H] versus [Mg/Fe] diagram and distances from APOGEE data release 14, we compare the spatial distributions, the l-Vlos diagram and the abundance gradients between high-[Mg/Fe] and low-[Mg/Fe] sequences. The two sequences are clearly shown at 5<|Z|<10 kpc in the metallicity range of -1.6 <[Fe/H] <-0.7, where the halo at |Z| > 10 kpc consists of low-[Mg/Fe] stars only. In the intermediate-metallicity range of -1.1 <[Fe/H]<-0.7, a [Mg/Fe] gradient is detected for stars at |Z|=10-30 kpc and it flattens out at |Z|>30 kpc. The l-Vlos diagram is adopted to separate halo stars from the disk by defining the transition metallicity, which is of [Fe/H]~ -1.1 dex for the high-[Mg/Fe] sequence and of [Fe/H]~-0.7 dex for the low-[Mg/Fe] sequence. The R and |Z| distributions for the high-[Mg/Fe] sequence, the thick disk at -1.1<[Fe/H]<-0.7 and the in situ halo at -1.6<[Fe/H]<-1.1, have a cutoff at R~15 kpc and |Z|~10 kpc, beyond which low-[Mg/Fe] halo stars are the main contributions. In the metallicity range of -1.6<[Fe/H]<-0.7, there is a negative metallicity gradient for the high-[Mg/Fe] halo at |Z|<8-10 kpc, while only a marginal or no slope in the [Fe/H] versus |Z| diagram for the low-[Mg/Fe] halo at |Z|<8-10 kpc, beyond which both the high-[Mg/Fe] halo and low-[Mg/Fe] halo flatten out toward |Z| > 20 kpc. These results indicate a complicated formation history of the Galaxy and we may see a hint of a three-section halo, i.e. the inner in situ halo within $|Z|~8-10$ kpc, the intermediately outer dual-mode halo at |Z|~10-30 kpc, and the extremely outer accreted halo with |Z|>30 kpc.
The Hercules stream is a group of co-moving stars in the Solar neighbourhood, which can potentially be explained as a signature of either the outer Lindblad resonance (OLR) of a fast Galactic bar or the corotation resonance of a slower bar. In either case, the feature should be present over a large area of the disc. With the recent commissioning of the APOGEE-2 Southern spectrograph we can search for the Hercules stream at $(l,b)=(270^circ,0)$, a direction in which the Hercules stream, if caused by the bars OLR, would be strong enough to be detected using only the line-of-sight velocities. We clearly detect a narrow, Hercules-like feature in the data that can be traced from the solar neighbourhood to a distance of about 4 kpc. The detected feature matches well the line-of-sight velocity distribution from the fast-bar (OLR) model. Confronting the data with a model where the Hercules stream is caused by the corotation resonance of a slower bar leads to a poorer match, as the corotation model does not predict clearly separated modes, possibly because the slow-bar model is too hot.
The nature of the Triangulum-Andromeda (TriAnd) system has been debated since the discovery of this distant, low-latitude Milky Way (MW) overdensity more than a decade ago. Explanations for its origin are either as a halo substructure from the disruption of a dwarf galaxy or a distant extension of the Galactic disk. We test these hypotheses using chemical abundances of a dozen TriAnd members from the Sloan Digital Sky Surveys 14th Data Release of Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) data to compare to APOGEE abundances of stars with similar metallicity from both the Sagittarius (Sgr) dSph, and the outer MW disk. We find that TriAnd stars are chemically distinct from Sgr across a variety of elements, (C+N), Mg, K, Ca, Mn, and Ni, with a separation in [X/Fe] of about 0.1 to 0.4 dex depending on the element. Instead, the TriAnd stars, with a median metallicity of about -0.8, exhibit chemical abundance ratios similar to those of the lowest metallicity ([Fe/H] ~ -0.7) stars in the outer Galactic disk, and are consistent with expectations of extrapolated chemical gradients in the outer disk of the MW. These results suggest that TriAnd is associated with the MW disk, and, therefore, that the disk extends to this overdensity --- i.e., past a Galactocentric radius of 24 kpc --- albeit vertically perturbed about 7 kpc below the nominal disk midplane in this region of the Galaxy.
We present an overview of the distributions of 11 elemental abundances in the Milky Ways inner regions, as traced by APOGEE stars released as part of SDSS Data Release 14/15 (DR14/DR15), including O, Mg, Si, Ca, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Na, Al, and K. This sample spans ~4000 stars with R_GC<4 kpc, enabling the most comprehensive study to date of these abundances and their variations within the innermost few kiloparsecs of the Milky Way. We describe the observed abundance patterns ([X/Fe]-[Fe/H]), compare to previous literature results and to patterns in stars at the solar Galactic radius, and discuss possible trends with DR14/DR15 effective temperatures. We find that the position of the [Mg/Fe]-[Fe/H] knee is nearly constant with R_GC, indicating a well-mixed star-forming medium or high levels of radial migration in the early inner Galaxy. We quantify the linear correlation between pairs of elements in different subsamples of stars and find that these relationships vary; some abundance correlations are very similar between the alpha-rich and alpha-poor stars, but others differ significantly, suggesting variations in the metallicity dependencies of certain supernova yields. These empirical trends will form the basis for more detailed future explorations and for the refinement of model comparison metrics. That the inner Milky Way abundances appear dominated by a single chemical evolutionary track and that they extend to such high metallicities underscore the unique importance of this part of the Galaxy for constraining the ingredients of chemical evolution modeling and for improving our understanding of the evolution of the Galaxy as a whole.
In the context of the ESO-VLT Multi-Instrument Kinematic Survey (MIKiS) of Galactic globular clusters, we present the line-of-sight rotation curve and velocity dispersion profile of M5 (NGC 5904), as determined from the radial velocity of more than 800 individual stars observed out to 700 (~ 5 half-mass radii) from the center. We find one of the cleanest and most coherent rotation patterns ever observed for globular clusters, with a very stable rotation axis (having constant position angle of 145^o at all surveyed radii) and a well-defined rotation curve. The density distribution turns out to be flattened in the direction perpendicular to the rotation axis, with a maximum ellipticity of 0.15. The rotation velocity peak (~3 km/s in projection) is observed at ~0.6 half-mass radii, and its ratio with respect to the central velocity dispersion (~0.3-0.4 at 4 projected half-mass radii) indicates that ordered motions play a significant dynamical role. This result strengthens the growing empirical evidence of the kinematic complexity of Galactic globular clusters and motivates the need of fundamental investigations of the role of angular momentum in collisional stellar dynamics.
Using 3D positions and kinematics of stars relative to the Sagittarius (Sgr) orbital plane and angular momentum, we identify 166 Sgr stream members observed by the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) that also have Gaia DR2 astrometry. This sample of 63/103 stars in the Sgr trailing/leading arm are combined with an APOGEE sample of 710 members of the Sgr dwarf spheroidal core (385 of them newly presented here) to establish differences of 0.6 dex in median metallicity and 0.1 dex in [$alpha$/Fe] between our Sgr core and dynamically older stream samples. Mild chemical gradients are found internally along each arm, but these steepen when anchored by core stars. With a model of Sgr tidal disruption providing estimated dynamical ages (i.e., stripping times) for each stream star, we find a mean metallicity gradient of 0.12 +/- 0.03 dex/Gyr for stars stripped from Sgr over time. For the first time, an [$alpha$/Fe] gradient is also measured within the stream, at 0.02 +/- 0.01 dex/Gyr using magnesium abundances and 0.04 +/- 0.01 dex/Gyr using silicon, which imply that the Sgr progenitor had significant radial abundance gradients. We discuss the magnitude of those inferred gradients and their implication for the nature of the Sgr progenitor within the context of the current family of Milky Way satellite galaxies, and suggest that more sophisticated Sgr models are needed to properly interpret the growing chemodynamical detail we have on the Sgr system.