The thick disk rotation-metallicity correlation as a fossil of an "inverse chemical gradient" in the early Galaxy
Anna Curir, Mario G. Lattanzi, Alessandro Spagna, Francesca Matteucci,, Giuseppe Murante, Paola Re Fiorentin, Emanuele Spitoni

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to demonstrate that internal dynamical processes like radial migration can produce the observed rotation-metallicity correlation in the Milky Way's thick disk, reflecting an ancient inverse chemical gradient.
Contribution
It shows that secular dynamical processes alone can generate the thick disk's rotation-metallicity correlation, linking it to early Galaxy chemical evolution.
Findings
Simulation reproduces observed correlation at 8-10 kpc galactocentric distance.
Correlation persists for up to 6 Gyr in the simulation.
Supports internal disk processes as key in thick disk formation.
Abstract
The thick disk rotation--metallicity correlation, \partial V_\phi/\partial[Fe/H] =40\div 50 km s^{-1}dex^{-1} represents an important signature of the formation processes of the galactic disk. We use nondissipative numerical simulations to follow the evolution of a Milky Way (MW)-like disk to verify if secular dynamical processes can account for this correlation in the old thick disk stellar population. We followed the evolution of an ancient disk population represented by 10 million particles whose chemical abundances were assigned by assuming a cosmologically plausible radial metallicity gradient with lower metallicity in the inner regions, as expected for the 10-Gyr-old MW. Essentially, inner disk stars move towards the outer regions and populate layers located at higher |z|. A rotation--metallicity correlation appears, which well resembles the behaviour observed in our Galaxy at a…
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