The Genesis of the Milky Way's Thick Disk via Stellar Migration
Sarah R. Loebman, Rok Roskar, Victor P. Debattista, Zeljko Ivezic,, Thomas R. Quinn, and James Wadsley

TL;DR
This paper proposes that the Milky Way's thick disk can form through internal stellar migration, without requiring external violent events, as shown by N-body simulations matching observed properties.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that a double-exponential vertical structure of the thick disk can arise solely from internal stellar migration, challenging the idea that it formed exclusively through early cataclysmic events.
Findings
Simulations reproduce the observed dichotomy in stellar properties.
Stars migrating outward form a thickened disk component.
The scenario aligns with SDSS observations of the Milky Way.
Abstract
The separation of the Milky Way disk into a thin and thick component is supported by differences in the spatial, kinematic and metallicity distributions of their stars. These differences have led to the view that the thick disk formed early via a cataclysmic event and constitutes fossil evidence of the hierarchical growth of the Milky Way. We show here, using N-body simulations, how a double-exponential vertical structure, with stellar populations displaying similar dichotomies can arise purely through internal evolution. In this picture, stars migrate radially, while retaining nearly circular orbits, as described by Sellwood & Binney (2002). As stars move outwards they populate a thickened component. Such stars found at the present time in the solar neighborhood formed early in the disk's history at smaller radii where stars are more metal-poor and alpha-enhanced, leading to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
