Stellar Genealogy: The Search for the First Stars and Everything in Between
by
FC61
AlbaNova Main Building
The lowest metallicity stars in the Milky Way Halo are the fossil records of the earliest star-forming environments in the Universe. Chemo-dynamical studies of such rare objects can address a myriad of open questions, ranging from primordial nucleosynthesis and the mass function of the first stars to the nature of the astrophysical r-process and the early merger history of the Milky Way. The detailed abundance patterns of these stellar relics, which can only be obtained from high-resolution spectroscopy, help us build a clear understanding of the pathways that led to the chemical complexity we observe today. In this talk, I will present recent results on the spectroscopic validation of low-metallicity stars selected from narrow-band photometry and low-resolution spectroscopy. I will also talk about the discovery of chemically peculiar stars in the Milky Way, which present chemical abundance patterns that match the ones from the ejecta of a neutron-star merger event and zero-metallicity supernovae. Combined, these efforts are adding key pieces of information to help stellar archaeologists constrain the chemical evolution of the Universe and solve the intricate chemo-dynamical puzzle of the formation of the Milky Way.
Andrii and Helena