The spatial structure of mono-abundance sub-populations of the Milky Way disk
Jo Bovy (IAS), Hans-Walter Rix (MPIA), Chao Liu (MPIA), David W. Hogg, (NYU, MPIA), Timothy C. Beers (NOAO, Michigan State), Young Sun Lee (Michigan, State)

TL;DR
This study models the spatial structure of mono-abundance stellar populations in the Milky Way disk, revealing simple exponential profiles and an inside-out formation pattern, challenging traditional thick-thin disk views.
Contribution
It introduces a rigorous density modeling approach for spectroscopic surveys to analyze the global spatial structure of stellar sub-populations based on chemical abundances.
Findings
Each mono-abundance sub-population has a simple exponential spatial structure.
Older, low-metallicity, high-[α/Fe] populations are more centrally concentrated.
Largest scale-height populations have the shortest scale lengths.
Abstract
The spatial, kinematic, and elemental-abundance structure of the Milky Way's stellar disk is complex, and has been difficult to dissect with local spectroscopic or global photometric data. Here, we develop and apply a rigorous density modeling approach for Galactic spectroscopic surveys that enables investigation of the global spatial structure of stellar sub-populations in narrow bins of [\alpha/Fe] and [Fe/H], using 23,767 G-type dwarfs from SDSS/SEGUE. We fit models for the number density of each such mono-abundance component, properly accounting for the complex spectroscopic SEGUE sampling of the underlying stellar population. We find that each mono-abundance sub-population has a simple spatial structure that can be described by a single exponential in both the vertical and radial direction, with continuously increasing scale heights (~200 pc to 1 kpc) and decreasing scale lengths…
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