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Abstract
The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is the Milky Way ' s most massive satellite galaxy, which only recently (similar to 2 billion years ago) fell into our Galaxy. As stellar atmospheres preserve the composition of their natal cloud, the LMC ' s recent infall makes its most ancient, metal-deficient (' low-metallicity ') stars unique windows into early star formation and nucleosynthesis in a formerly distant region of the high-redshift universe. Here we present the elemental abundances of ten stars in the LMC with iron-to-hydrogen ratios ranging from similar to 1/300th to similar to 1/12,000th that of the Sun. Our most metal-deficient star is markedly more metal-deficient than any in the LMC with available detailed chemical abundance patterns and was probably enriched by a single extragalactic ' first-star ' supernova. This star lacks appreciable carbon enhancement, as does our overall sample, unlike the lowest-metallicity stars in the Milky Way. This and other abundance differences affirm that the extragalactic early LMC experienced diverging enrichment processes compared to the early Milky Way. Early element production, driven by the earliest stars, thus, appears to proceed in an environment-dependent manner.
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Abstract
Milky Way globular clusters (GCs) display chemical enrichment in a phenomenon called multiple stellar populations (MSPs). While the enrichment mechanism is not fully understood, there is a correlation between a cluster's mass and the fraction of enriched stars found therein. However, present-day GC masses are often smaller than their masses at the time of formation due to dynamical mass-loss. In this work, we explore the relationship between mass and MSPs using the stellar stream 300S. We present the chemical abundances of eight red giant branch member stars in 300S with high-resolution spectroscopy from Magellan/MIKE. We identify one enriched star characteristic of MSPs and no detectable metallicity dispersion, confirming that the progenitor of 300S was a GC. The fraction of enriched stars (12.5 per cent) observed in our 300S stars is less than the 50 per cent of stars found enriched in Milky Way GCs of comparable present-day mass (similar to 10(4.5 )M(circle dot)). We calculate the mass of 300S's progenitor and compare it to the initial masses of intact GCs, finding that 300S aligns well with the trend between the system mass at formation and enrichment. 300S's progenitor may straddle the critical mass threshold for the formation of MSPs and can therefore serve as a benchmark for the stellar enrichment process. Additionally, we identify a CH star, with high abundances of s-process elements, probably accreted from a binary companion. The rarity of such binaries in intact GCs may imply stellar streams permit the survival of binaries that would otherwise be disrupted.
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Meng Gu sits outside with a laptop
March 22, 2024
Spotlight

Postdoc Spotlight: Meng Gu

Oded Elazar working in the lab
March 29, 2024
Spotlight

Postdoc Spotlight: Oded Elazar

Johanna Teske presents to the Carnegie Science Board of Trustees
April 16, 2024
Organizational News

Johanna Teske is Carnegie Science's first jointly appointed Staff Scientist

Julien Rojas loads a sample into the press
April 19, 2024
Spotlight

Postdoc Spotlight: Julien Rojas-Arispe

The sun shines on the horizon of Earth, as viewed from space.
April 22, 2024
Organizational News

Carnegie Science launches new Climate and Resilience Hub

Headshot of Arthur R Grossman
April 23, 2024
Awards

Carnegie’s Arthur Grossman recognized for career contributions by the American Society of Plant Biologists

Abstract
TOI-677 b is part of an emerging class of "tidally detached" gas giants (a/Ra. 11) that exhibit large orbital eccentricities and yet low stellar obliquities. Such sources pose a challenge for models of giant planet formation, which must account for the excitation of high eccentricities without large changes in the orbital inclination. In this work, we present a new Rossiter-McLaughlin measurement of the tidally detached warm Jupiter TOI-677 b, obtained using high-precision radial velocity observations with Magellan's Planet Finder Spectrograph (PFS). Combined with previously published observations from the Very Large Telescope's ESPRESSO spectrograph, we derive one of the most precisely constrained sky-projected spin-orbit angle measurements to date for an exoplanet. The combined fit offers a refined set of self-consistent parameters, including a low sky-projected stellar obliquity of l =. 3 2+ 1. 51. 6.. and a moderately high eccentricity of = e 0.460+ 0.0180.019, which further constrain the puzzling architecture of this system. We examine several potential scenarios that may have produced the current TOI-677 orbital configuration, ultimately concluding that TOI-677 b most likely had its eccentricity excited through diskplanet interactions. This system adds to a growing population of aligned warm Jupiters on eccentric orbits around hot (Teff > 6100 K) stars. Unified Astronomy Thesaurus concepts: Planetary theory (1258); Exoplanet tides (497); Exoplanet migration (2205); Planetary dynamics (2173); Exoplanets (498); Hot Jupiters (753); Exoplanet systems ( 484); Star-planet interactions (2177); Planetary alignment (1243); Exoplanet evolution (491); Exoplanet astronomy (486); Exoplanet dynamics (490)
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This artist’s concept shows what the hot gas-giant exoplanet WASP-43 b could look like.  Courtesy NASA, ESA, CSA, Ralf Crawford (STScI)
April 30, 2024
Press Release

JWST enables research team to map the weather on an exoplanet 280 light-years from Earth

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