GHOST commissioning science results - II: a very metal-poor star witnessing the early galactic assembly
This study focuses on Pristine_180956.78-294759.8 (hereafter P180956, [Fe/H] = -1.95 +/- 0.02), a star selected from the Pristine Inner Galaxy Survey (PIGS), and followed-up with the recently commissioned Gemini High-resolution Optical SpecTrograph (GHOST) at the Gemini South telescope. The GHOST spectrograph's high efficiency in the blue spectral region (3700-4800 & Aring;) enables the detection of elemental tracers of early supernovae (e.g. Al, Mn, Sr, and Eu). The star exhibits chemical signatures resembling those found in ultrafaint dwarf (UFD) systems, characterized by very low abundances of neutron-capture elements (Sr, Ba, and Eu), which are uncommon among stars in the Milky Way halo. Our analysis suggests that P180956 bears the chemical imprints of a small number (2 or 4) of low-mass hypernovae (similar to 10-15M(circle dot)), which are needed to mostly reproduce the abundance pattern of the light-elements (e.g. [Si, Ti/Mg, Ca] similar to 0.6), and one fast-rotating intermediate-mass supernova (similar to 300km s(-1), similar to 80-120M(circle dot)), which is the main channel contributing to the high [Sr/Ba] (similar to+1.2). The small pericentric (similar to 0.7kpc) and apocentric (similar to 13kpc) distances and its orbit confined to the plane (less than or similar to 2kpc) indicate that this star was likely accreted during the early Galactic assembly phase. Its chemo-dynamical properties suggest that P180956 formed in a system similar to a UFD galaxy accreted either alone, as one of the low-mass building blocks of the proto-Galaxy, or as a satellite of Gaia-Sausage-Enceladus. The combination of Gemini's large aperture with GHOST's high efficiency and broad spectral coverage makes this new spectrograph one of the leading instruments for near-field cosmology investigations.
document.pdf
Publisher's version
openaccess
CC BY
1.39 KB
Adobe PDF
c9297c661d1ed087c7c6dac126cdce71