On the metallicity gradient of the Galactic disk
S. Pedicelli, G. Bono, B. Lemasle, P. Francois, M. Groenewegen, J., Lub, J.W. Pel, D. Laney, A. Piersimoni, M. Romaniello, R. Buonanno, F., Caputo, S. Cassisi, F. Castelli, S. Leurini, A. Pietrinferni, F. Primas, J., Pritchard

TL;DR
This study analyzes the iron abundance gradient in the Galactic disk using Cepheids, revealing a steeper gradient in the inner disk and significant regional differences in metallicity distribution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed measurement of the Galactic iron gradient with a large Cepheid sample, highlighting a break between inner and outer disk slopes and regional metallicity variations.
Findings
Inner disk slope is approximately three times steeper than outer disk slope.
No clear metallicity trend across quadrants in the outer disk.
Significant differences in metal-poor and metal-rich Cepheid fractions between quadrants.
Abstract
Aims: The iron abundance gradient in the Galactic stellar disk provides fundamental constraints on the chemical evolution of this important Galaxy component. However the spread around the mean slope is, at fixed Galactocentric distance, larger than estimated uncertainties. Methods: To provide quantitative constraints on these trends we adopted iron abundances for 265 classical Cepheids (more than 50% of the currently known sample) based either on high-resolution spectra or on photometric metallicity indices. Homogeneous distances were estimated using near-infrared Period-Luminosity relations. The sample covers the four disk quadrants and their Galactocentric distances range from ~5 to ~17 kpc. Results: A linear regression over the entire sample provides an iron gradient of -0.051+/-0.004 dex/kpc. The above slope agrees quite well, within the errors, with previous estimates based either…
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