A halo of chemically primitive stars around an ancient dwarf galaxy. Online Seminar by Ani Chiti (MIT)

Jun
19
2020
Jun
19
2020

Event Location
IReNA Online Seminar

Event Hosted By
JINA-CEE

Zoom Link

Zoom Link

https://msu.zoom.us/j/827950260

About the Speaker

About the Speaker

http://www.mit.edu/~achiti/


The Milky Way is surrounded by dozens of ultra-faint dwarf galaxies. These systems are the remnants of the earliest galaxies, and spectroscopy of their stars thereby reveals the elements produced by chemical evolution in a primitive, self-contained environment. Previous spectroscopic studies, however, had largely been limited to stars within the core of these galaxies (~2 half-light radii) due to the sparseness of their distant stars. In this talk, I will present the detection of extremely metal-poor stars ([Fe/H] < -3.0) out to 9 half-light radii in the Tucana II ultra-faint dwarf galaxy; the first detection of a population of stars outside the core region (~4 half-light radii) of any ultra-faint dwarf galaxy. These distant stars are, on average, more metal-poor than the central population (<[Fe/H]>=-3.18 vs. <[Fe/H]>=-2.71) and suppress the mean metallicity to <[Fe/H]> ~ -2.85. This difference is the first evidence of a metallicity gradient in an early galaxy remnant and suggests Tucana II, and perhaps other ultra-faints, plausibly were influenced by early, strong feedback episodes or a galactic merger. Such distant stars also imply that Tucana II harbors a massive, spatially extended dark matter halo. Collectively, these results suggest that key factors (e.g., most metal-poor stars, evidence of extended dark matter haloes) in understanding the early chemical evolution of ultra-faint dwarf galaxies lie in their outskirts and were missed by previous observational work. I will thereby also present an upcoming photometric survey of all southern-hemisphere ultra-faint dwarf galaxies to discover any spatially extended stellar populations, which our results suggest is necessary to understand the early evolution of these relic systems.