The GALAH Survey: No Chemical Evidence of an Extragalactic Origin for the Nyx Stream

Author:

Zucker Daniel B.ORCID,Simpson Jeffrey D.ORCID,Martell Sarah L.ORCID,Lewis Geraint F.ORCID,Casey Andrew R.ORCID,Ting Yuan-SenORCID,Horner JonathanORCID,Nordlander ThomasORCID,Wyse Rosemary F. G.ORCID,Zwitter TomažORCID,Bland-Hawthorn JossORCID,Buder SvenORCID,Asplund MartinORCID,De Silva Gayandhi M.ORCID,D’Orazi ValentinaORCID,Freeman Ken C.ORCID,Hayden Michael R.ORCID,Kos Janez,Lin Jane,Lind KarinORCID,Schlesinger Katharine J.ORCID,Sharma SanjibORCID,Stello DennisORCID

Abstract

Abstract The results from the ESA Gaia astrometric mission and deep photometric surveys have revolutionized our knowledge of the Milky Way. There are many ongoing efforts to search these data for stellar substructure to find evidence of individual accretion events that built up the Milky Way and its halo. One of these newly identified features, called Nyx, was announced as an accreted stellar stream traveling in the plane of the disk. Using a combination of elemental abundances and stellar parameters from the GALAH and Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) surveys, we find that the abundances of the highest likelihood Nyx members are entirely consistent with membership of the thick disk, and inconsistent with a dwarf galaxy origin. We conclude that the postulated Nyx stream is most probably a high-velocity component of the Milky Way’s thick disk. With the growing availability of large data sets including kinematics, stellar parameters, and detailed abundances, the probability of detecting chance associations increases, and hence new searches for substructure require confirmation across as many data dimensions as possible.

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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