Beryllium abundances and star formation in the halo and in the thick disk
R. Smiljanic, L. Pasquini, P. Bonifacio, D. Galli, R. G. Gratton, S., Randich, B. Wolff

TL;DR
This study investigates beryllium's evolution in the early Galaxy, revealing its potential as a cosmochronometer and uncovering complex formation histories of the halo and thick disk through detailed stellar abundance analysis.
Contribution
It provides the largest sample of Be abundances in halo and thick disk stars, revealing new insights into Galactic formation and the use of Be as a time indicator.
Findings
Detection of scatter in Be abundances among halo stars.
Identification of two halo components with different chemical signatures.
Evidence for inside-out formation of the thick disk.
Abstract
[abridged] Beryllium is a pure product of cosmic ray spallation. This implies a relatively simple evolution in time of the beryllium abundance and suggests its use as a time-like observable. We study the evolution of Be in the early Galaxy and its dependence on kinematic and orbital parameters. We investigate the formation of the halo and the thick disk of the Galaxy and the use of Be as a cosmochronometer. Beryllium abundances are determined from high resolution, high signal to noise UVES spectra with spectrum synthesis in the largest sample of halo and thick disk stars analyzed to date. We present our observational results in various diagrams. 1) In a log(Be/H) vs [Fe/H] diagram we find a marginal statistical detection of a real scatter, above what expected from measurement errors, with a larger scatter among halo stars. The detection of the scatter is further supported by the…
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