The first chemical abundance analysis of K giants in the inner Galactic disc
T. Bensby (1), A. Alves-Brito (2), M.S. Oey (3), D. Yong (4), J., Mel\'endez (5) ((1) European Southern Observatory, Chile, (2) Departamento de, Astronomia y Astrofisica, Universidad Catolica de Chile, (3) Dept. of, Astronomy, University of Michigan, USA

TL;DR
This study presents the first detailed chemical abundance analysis of K giants in the inner Galactic disc, revealing similarities with the thick disc and bulge, and providing new insights into the Galaxy's formation history.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive elemental abundance data for inner Galactic disc K giants, enabling direct comparison with other Galactic components.
Findings
Inner disc stars show thin/thick disc-like chemical and kinematic dichotomy.
Abundance trends of inner disc stars match those of the thick disc.
Inner disc stars have chemical similarities with the Galactic bulge.
Abstract
The elemental abundance structure of the Galactic disc has been extensively studied in the solar neighbourhood using long-lived stars such as F and G dwarfs or K and M giants. These are stars whose atmospheres preserve the chemical composition of their natal gas clouds, and are hence excellent tracers of the chemical evolution of the Galaxy. As far as we are aware, there are no such studies of the inner Galactic disc, which hampers our ability to constrain and trace the origin and evolution of the Milky Way. Therefore, we aim in this study to establish the elemental abundance trend(s) of the disc(s) in the inner regions of the Galaxy. Based on equivalent width measurements in high-resolution spectra obtained with the MIKE spectrograph on the Magellan II telescope on Las Campanas in Chile, we determine elemental abundances for 44 K-type red giant stars in the inner Galactic disc, located…
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