A stellar stream remnant of a globular cluster below the metallicity floor

Martin, Nicolas F.; Venn, Kim A.; Aguado, David S.; Starkenburg, Else; González Hernández, Jonay I.; Ibata, Rodrigo A.; Bonifacio, Piercarlo; Caffau, Elisabetta; Sestito, Federico; Arentsen, Anke; Allende Prieto, Carlos; Carlberg, Raymond G.; Fabbro, Sébastien; Fouesneau, Morgan; Hill, Vanessa; Jablonka, Pascale; Kordopatis, Georges; Lardo, Carmela; Malhan, Khyati; Mashonkina, Lyudmila I.; McConnachie, Alan W.; Navarro, Julio F.; Sánchez-Janssen, Rubén; Thomas, Guillaume F.; Yuan, Zhen; Mucciarelli, Alessio
Bibliographical reference

Nature

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1
2022
Journal
Number of authors
26
IAC number of authors
3
Citations
28
Refereed citations
24
Description
Stellar ejecta gradually enrich the gas out of which subsequent stars form, making the least chemically enriched stellar systems direct fossils of structures formed in the early Universe1. Although a few hundred stars with metal content below 1,000th of the solar iron content are known in the Galaxy2-4, none of them inhabit globular clusters, some of the oldest known stellar structures. These show metal content of at least approximately 0.2% of the solar metallicity ([Fe /H ]≳−2.7 )?. This metallicity floor appears universal5,6, and it has been proposed that protogalaxies that merged into the galaxies we observe today were simply not massive enough to form clusters that survived to the present day7. Here we report observations of a stellar stream, C-19, whose metallicity is less than 0.05% of the solar metallicity ([F e / H ]=−3.38 ±0.06 (s t a t i s t i c a l )±0.20 (s y s t e m a t i c ))?. The low metallicity dispersion and the chemical abundances of the C-19 stars show that this stream is the tidal remnant of the most metal-poor globular cluster ever discovered, and is significantly below the purported metallicity floor: clusters with significantly lower metallicities than observed today existed in the past and contributed their stars to the Milky Way halo.
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