Stellar haloes in Milky Way mass galaxies: From the inner to the outer haloes

We present a comprehensive study of the chemical properties of the stellar haloes of Milky Way mass galaxies, analysing the transition between the inner to the outer haloes. We find the transition radius between the relative dominance of the inner-halo and outer-halo stellar populations to be ̃15-20...

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Autores principales: Tissera, P.B., Beers, T.C., Carollo, D., Scannapieco, C.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00358711_v439_n3_p3128_Tissera
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spelling todo:paper_00358711_v439_n3_p3128_Tissera2023-10-03T14:47:10Z Stellar haloes in Milky Way mass galaxies: From the inner to the outer haloes Tissera, P.B. Beers, T.C. Carollo, D. Scannapieco, C. Evolution-galaxies Formation-cosmology Galaxy Structure-galaxies Theory We present a comprehensive study of the chemical properties of the stellar haloes of Milky Way mass galaxies, analysing the transition between the inner to the outer haloes. We find the transition radius between the relative dominance of the inner-halo and outer-halo stellar populations to be ̃15-20 kpc for most of our haloes, similar to that inferred for the Milky Way from recent observations. While the number density of stars in the simulated inner-halo populations decreases rapidly with distance, the outer-halo populations contribute about 20-40 per cent in the fiducial solar neighbourhood, in particular at the lowest metallicities. We have determined [Fe/H] profiles for our simulated haloes; they exhibit flat or mild gradients, in the range [-0.002, -0.01] dex kpc-1. The metallicity distribution functions exhibit different features, reflecting the different assembly history of the individual stellar haloes. We find that stellar haloes formed with larger contributions from massive subgalactic systems have steeper metallicity gradients. Very metal-poor stars are mainly contributed to the halo systems by lower mass satellites. There is a clear trend among the predicted metallicity distribution functions that a higher fraction of low-metallicity stars are found with increasing radius. These properties are consistent with the range of behaviours observed for stellar haloes of nearby galaxies. © 2014 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00358711_v439_n3_p3128_Tissera
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Evolution-galaxies
Formation-cosmology
Galaxy
Structure-galaxies
Theory
spellingShingle Evolution-galaxies
Formation-cosmology
Galaxy
Structure-galaxies
Theory
Tissera, P.B.
Beers, T.C.
Carollo, D.
Scannapieco, C.
Stellar haloes in Milky Way mass galaxies: From the inner to the outer haloes
topic_facet Evolution-galaxies
Formation-cosmology
Galaxy
Structure-galaxies
Theory
description We present a comprehensive study of the chemical properties of the stellar haloes of Milky Way mass galaxies, analysing the transition between the inner to the outer haloes. We find the transition radius between the relative dominance of the inner-halo and outer-halo stellar populations to be ̃15-20 kpc for most of our haloes, similar to that inferred for the Milky Way from recent observations. While the number density of stars in the simulated inner-halo populations decreases rapidly with distance, the outer-halo populations contribute about 20-40 per cent in the fiducial solar neighbourhood, in particular at the lowest metallicities. We have determined [Fe/H] profiles for our simulated haloes; they exhibit flat or mild gradients, in the range [-0.002, -0.01] dex kpc-1. The metallicity distribution functions exhibit different features, reflecting the different assembly history of the individual stellar haloes. We find that stellar haloes formed with larger contributions from massive subgalactic systems have steeper metallicity gradients. Very metal-poor stars are mainly contributed to the halo systems by lower mass satellites. There is a clear trend among the predicted metallicity distribution functions that a higher fraction of low-metallicity stars are found with increasing radius. These properties are consistent with the range of behaviours observed for stellar haloes of nearby galaxies. © 2014 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.
format JOUR
author Tissera, P.B.
Beers, T.C.
Carollo, D.
Scannapieco, C.
author_facet Tissera, P.B.
Beers, T.C.
Carollo, D.
Scannapieco, C.
author_sort Tissera, P.B.
title Stellar haloes in Milky Way mass galaxies: From the inner to the outer haloes
title_short Stellar haloes in Milky Way mass galaxies: From the inner to the outer haloes
title_full Stellar haloes in Milky Way mass galaxies: From the inner to the outer haloes
title_fullStr Stellar haloes in Milky Way mass galaxies: From the inner to the outer haloes
title_full_unstemmed Stellar haloes in Milky Way mass galaxies: From the inner to the outer haloes
title_sort stellar haloes in milky way mass galaxies: from the inner to the outer haloes
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00358711_v439_n3_p3128_Tissera
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AT beerstc stellarhaloesinmilkywaymassgalaxiesfromtheinnertotheouterhaloes
AT carollod stellarhaloesinmilkywaymassgalaxiesfromtheinnertotheouterhaloes
AT scannapiecoc stellarhaloesinmilkywaymassgalaxiesfromtheinnertotheouterhaloes
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