Joint Astrophysics Colloquium
From building blocks to large galaxies: towards
understanding the formation of the Milky Way using metal-poor star
Anna Frebel
Massachusetts Institute of technology
The early chemical evolution of the Galaxy and the Universe is vital to our
understanding of a host of astrophysical phenomena. Since the oldest, most
metal-poor stars are relics from the high-redshift universe, they probe the
chemical and dynamical conditions of a time when large galaxies first began
to assemble. Recent works have shown that the ultra-faint dwarf galaxies
(with L<10^5Lsun) contain a relatively large fraction of extremely metal-poor
stars and are devoid of solar-metallicity stars. This reflects a rather short
or truncated star formation history similar to what one would expect to occur
in a first/early galaxy. The chemical signatures of these dwarfs furthermore
support the concept that small systems analogous to the surviving ultra-faint
galaxies were the building blocks of the Milky Way's low-metallicity halo.
This opens a new window for studying galaxy formation with the means of
stellar chemical analyses. I will also include some information on our newly
discovered most iron-poor star.
Tuesday, January 21st 2014, 16:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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