The DESI Y1 RR Lyrae catalog I: Empirical modeling of the cyclic variation of spectroscopic properties and a chemodynamical analysis of the outer halo
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We present the catalog of RR Lyrae stars (RRLs) observed in the first year of operations of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) survey. This catalog contains 6,240 RRLs out to $\sim120$\,kpc from the Galactic center and over 12,000 individual epochs with homogeneously-derived stellar atmospheric parameters. We introduce a novel methodology to model the cyclical variation of the spectroscopic properties of RRLs from single-epoch measurements. We employ this method to infer the systemic velocities and mean temperatures of fundamental and first-overtone mode RRLs in our sample (without distinguishing between individual spectral lines). For fundamental mode pulsators, we obtain radial velocity curves with amplitudes of $\sim$30--80\,km\,s$^{-1}$ and effective temperature curves with 300--1,000\,K variations, whereas for first-overtone pulsators these amplitudes are $\sim20$\,km\,s$^{-1}$ and $\sim 600$\,K, respectively. We use our sample to study the metallicity distribution of the halo and its dependence on Galactocentric distance ($R_{\rm GC}$). Using a radius-dependent mixture model, we split the data into chemodynamically distinct components and find that our inner halo sample ($R_{\rm GC}\lesssim50$\,kpc) is predominantly composed of stars with [Fe/H] $\sim-1.5$ and largely radial orbits (with an anisotropy parameter $\beta\sim0.94$), that we associate with the Gaia-Sausage-Enceladus merger. Stars in the halo field exhibit a broader and more metal-poor [Fe/H] distribution with more circular orbits ($\beta\sim0.39$). The metallicity gradient of the metal-rich and the metal-poor components is found to be $0.005$ and $0.010$\,dex\,kpc$^{-1}$, respectively. Our catalog highlights DESI's tantalizing potential for studying the Milky Way and the pulsation properties of RRLs in the era of large spectroscopic surveys.
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