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    Reconstructing the Last Major Merger of the Milky Way with the H3 Survey

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    Naidu_2021_ApJ_923_92.pdf
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    Author
    Naidu, R.P.
    Conroy, C.
    Bonaca, A.
    Zaritsky, D.
    Weinberger, R.
    Ting, Y.-S.
    Caldwell, N.
    Tacchella, S.
    Han, J.J.
    Speagle, J.S.
    Cargile, P.A.
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    Affiliation
    Steward Observatory, University of Arizona
    Issue Date
    2021
    
    Metadata
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    Publisher
    IOP Publishing Ltd
    Citation
    Naidu, R. P., Conroy, C., Bonaca, A., Zaritsky, D., Weinberger, R., Ting, Y.-S., Caldwell, N., Tacchella, S., Han, J. J., Speagle, J. S., & Cargile, P. A. (2021). Reconstructing the Last Major Merger of the Milky Way with the H3 Survey. Astrophysical Journal.
    Journal
    Astrophysical Journal
    Rights
    Copyright © 2021. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
    Collection Information
    This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.
    Abstract
    Several lines of evidence suggest that the Milky Way underwent a major merger at z ∼ 2 with the Gaia-Sausage-Enceladus (GSE) galaxy. Here we use H3 Survey data to argue that GSE entered the Galaxy on a retrograde orbit based on a population of highly retrograde stars with chemistry similar to the largely radial GSE debris. We present the first tailored N-body simulations of the merger. From a grid of ≈500 simulations we find that a GSE with M ∗ = 5 × 108 M o˙, M DM = 2 × 1011 M o˙ best matches the H3 data. This simulation shows that the retrograde stars are stripped from GSE's outer disk early in the merger. Despite being selected purely on angular momenta and radial distributions, this simulation reproduces and explains the following phenomena: (i) the triaxial shape of the inner halo, whose major axis is at ≈35° to the plane and connects GSE's apocenters; (ii) the Hercules-Aquila Cloud and the Virgo Overdensity, which arise due to apocenter pileup; and (iii) the 2 Gyr lag between the quenching of GSE and the truncation of the age distribution of the in situ halo, which tracks the lag between the first and final GSE pericenters. We make the following predictions: (i) the inner halo has a "double-break"density profile with breaks at both ≈15-18 kpc and 30 kpc, coincident with the GSE apocenters; and (ii) the outer halo has retrograde streams awaiting discovery at >30 kpc that contain ≈10% of GSE's stars. The retrograde (radial) GSE debris originates from its outer (inner) disk - exploiting this trend, we reconstruct the stellar metallicity gradient of GSE (-0.04 ± 0.01 dex r50-1). These simulations imply that GSE delivered ≈20% of the Milky Way's present-day dark matter and ≈50% of its stellar halo. © 2021. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..
    Note
    Immediate access
    ISSN
    0004-637X
    DOI
    10.3847/1538-4357/ac2d2d
    Version
    Final published version
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.3847/1538-4357/ac2d2d
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    UA Faculty Publications

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