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The GALAH Survey: Accreted stars also inhabit the Spite Plateau

Authors :
Simpson, Jeffrey D.
Martell, Sarah L.
Buder, Sven
Sharma, Sanjib
Asplund, Martin
Bland-Hawthorn, Joss
Casey, Andrew R.
De Silva, Gayandhi M.
D'Orazi, Valentina
Freeman, Ken C.
Hayden, Michael
Kos, Janez
Lewis, Geraint F.
Lind, Karin
Stello, Dennis
Zucker, Daniel B.
Zwitter, Tomaž
Schlesinger, Katharine J.
Ting, Yuan-Sen
Nordlander, Thomas
Da Costa, Gary
Čotar, Klemen
Horner, Jonathan
Tepper-García, Thor
Collaboration, The GALAH
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The ESA Gaia astrometric mission has enabled the remarkable discovery that a large fraction of the stars near the Solar neighbourhood appear to be debris from a single in-falling system, the so-called Gaia-Enceladus-Sausage (GSE). One exciting feature of this result is that it gives astronomers for the first time a large sample of easily observable unevolved stars that formed in an extra-Galactic environment, which can be compared to stars that formed within our Milky Way. Here we use these stars to investigate the "Spite Plateau" -- the near-constant lithium abundance observed in metal-poor dwarf stars across a wide range of metallicities (-3<[Fe/H]<-1). In particular our aim is to test whether the stars that formed in the GSE show a different Spite Plateau to other Milky Way stars that inhabit the disk and halo. Individual galaxies could have different Spite Plateaus -- e.g., the ISM could be more depleted in lithium in a lower galactic mass system due to it having a smaller reservoir of gas. We identified 76 GSE dwarf stars observed and analyzed by the GALactic Archeology with HERMES (GALAH) survey as part of its Third Data Release. Orbital actions were used to select samples of Gaia-Enceladus stars, and comparison samples of halo and disk stars. We find that the Gaia-Enceladus stars show the same lithium abundance as other likely accreted stars and in situ Milky Way stars, strongly suggesting that the "lithium problem" is not a consequence of the formation environment. This result fits within the growing consensus that the Spite Plateau, and more generally the "cosmological lithium problem" -- the observed discrepancy between the amount of lithium in warm, metal-poor dwarf stars in our Galaxy, and the amount of lithium predicted to have been produced by Big Bang Nucleosynthesis -- is the result of lithium depletion processes within stars.<br />Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, updated version resubmitted to MNRAS after responding to positive referee report. Also now has attached galah_spite_stars.csv file which is full version of Table 1

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2011.02659
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab2012