Javascript must be enabled for the correct page display

The small galaxies that built up the Galactic halo

Berčuk, Ines (2024) The small galaxies that built up the Galactic halo. Bachelor's Thesis, Astronomy.

[img]
Preview
Text
bAST2024BercukI.pdf

Download (2MB) | Preview
[img] Text
toestemming_ Ines Berčuk _ degree programme_ Astronomy.pdf
Restricted to Registered users only

Download (135kB)

Abstract

The Milky Way halo is thought to have been created as a result of many galactic mergers in the past. However, a qualitative analysis of its progenitors and their masses is still incomplete. In order to uncover the merger mysteries of the galactic halo, we use a novel statistical method (Deason et al., 2023) based on the mass-metallicity relation. This well-known relationship describes that more massive galaxies result in more metal-rich stars, while the opposite is true for less massive galaxies and metal-poor stars. Using a catalogue of stars on exclusively halo-like orbits (Viswanathan et al., 2023) with high-quality [Fe/H] measurements down to the extremely metal-poor regime (Martin et al., 2023), we probe even the smallest accreted galaxies in the formation history of the Milky Way halo. We find that the mass-spectrum of its progenitors is dominated by thousands of small galaxies with masses ≲ 10^5 M⊙, while we uncover only a few tens of progenitors with masses larger than this value and a single massive galaxy with mass ∼ 10^8 M⊙. Using the mass-spectrum, we find the stellar mass of the halo of (6.1 ± 2.1)· 10^8 M⊙. These findings bring us closer to disentangling the complete merger history of the Milky Way halo.

Item Type: Thesis (Bachelor's Thesis)
Supervisor name: Starkenburg, E.
Degree programme: Astronomy
Thesis type: Bachelor's Thesis
Language: English
Date Deposited: 17 Jul 2024 07:56
Last Modified: 17 Jul 2024 07:56
URI: https://fse.studenttheses.ub.rug.nl/id/eprint/33410

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item