Chemo-orbital evidence from SDSS/SEGUE G-type dwarf stars for a mixed origin of the Milky Way's thick disk
Chao Liu, Glenn van de Ven

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemo-orbital properties of G-type dwarf stars in the Milky Way to understand the origins of the thick disk, revealing evidence for both internal evolution and external formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides new chemo-orbital evidence suggesting the thick disk has a mixed origin, including stars formed through radial migration and those from early gas-rich mergers.
Findings
Old metal-poor stars have eccentric orbits challenging radial migration explanations.
Significant contribution of thick-disk stars on eccentric orbits suggests external formation.
Old metal-poor stars may form a distinct thick-disk component from external processes.
Abstract
We combine the estimated metallicities [Fe/H], abundances [\alpha/Fe], positions and motions of a sample of 27,500 local (7<R/kpc<9, 0.5<|z|/kpc<2.5) SDSS/SEGUE G-type dwarf stars to investigate the chemo-orbital properties of the Milky Way's disk around the Sun. When we derive the orbital properties reflecting angular momentum, circularity, and thickness as function of [\alpha/Fe] vs. [Fe/H], we find that there is a smooth variation with [\alpha/Fe], a proxy for age. At the same time, the orbital properties of the old stars with [\alpha/Fe]0.25 do show a transition with [Fe/H]: below [Fe/H]-0.6 the orbital angular momentum decreases, and the orbits become significantly non-circular and thicker. Radial migration of stars into the Solar neighborhood would naturally result in a smooth variation in the orbital properties, but the latter old metal-poor stars form a clear…
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