The vertical motions of mono-abundance sub-populations in the Milky Way disk
Jo Bovy (IAS), Hans-Walter Rix (MPIA), David W. Hogg (NYU, MPIA),, Timothy C. Beers (NOAO, Michigan State), Young Sun Lee (Michigan State), Lan, Zhang (MPIA)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the vertical motions of mono-abundance stellar populations in the Milky Way disk, revealing a continuum of kinematic properties that challenge the traditional thin-thick disk dichotomy and inform models of galactic evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of vertical kinematics for mono-abundance populations, showing a continuous range of properties and challenging existing disk formation theories.
Findings
All populations exhibit nearly isothermal vertical kinematics.
Vertical velocity dispersion decreases slowly with radius.
No clear thin-thick disk dichotomy is observed.
Abstract
We present the vertical kinematics of stars in the Milky Way's stellar disk inferred from SDSS/SEGUE G-dwarf data, deriving the vertical velocity dispersion, \sigma_z, as a function of vertical height |z| and Galactocentric radius R for a set of 'mono-abundance' sub-populations of stars with very similar elemental abundances [\alpha/Fe] and [Fe/H]. We find that all components exhibit nearly isothermal kinematics in |z|, and a slow outward decrease of the vertical velocity dispersion: \sigma_z (z,R|[\alpha/Fe],[Fe/H]) ~ \sigma_z ([\alpha/Fe],[Fe/H]) x \exp (-(R-R_0)/7 kpc}). The characteristic velocity dispersions of these components vary from ~ 15 km/s for chemically young, metal-rich stars, to >~ 50 km/s for metal poor stars. The mean \sigma_z gradient away from the mid plane is only 0.3 +/- 0.2 km/s/kpc. We find a continuum of vertical kinetic temperatures (~\sigma^2_z) as function of…
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