Chemical evolution with radial mixing
Ralph Schoenrich, James Binney

TL;DR
This paper extends chemical evolution models of the Galaxy to include radial stellar migration and gas flow, successfully fitting multiple observational data sets and explaining the formation of the thick and thin discs.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model incorporating radial mixing and gas flow, providing new insights into the Galaxy's chemical and structural evolution.
Findings
Model fits the metallicity distribution of GCS stars
Reproduces the observed ([O/Fe],[Fe/H]) distribution with ridge lines
Explains the steep increase of stellar velocity dispersion with age
Abstract
Models of the chemical evolution of our Galaxy are extended to include radial migration of stars and flow of gas through the disc. The models track the production of both iron and alpha elements. A model is chosen that provides an excellent fit to the metallicity distribution of stars in the Geneva-Copenhagen survey (GCS) of the solar neighbourhood, and a good fit to the local Hess diagram. The model provides a good fit to the distribution of GCS stars in the age-metallicity plane although this plane was not used in the fitting process. Although this model's star-formation rate is monotonic declining, its disc naturally splits into an alpha-enhanced thick disc and a normal thin disc. In particular the model's distribution of stars in the ([O/Fe],[Fe/H]) plane resembles that of Galactic stars in displaying a ridge line for each disc. The thin-disc's ridge line is entirely due to stellar…
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