Chemodynamical evolution of the Milky Way disk I: The solar vicinity
I. Minchev, C. Chiappini, M. Martig

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel chemo-dynamical modeling approach for the Milky Way, combining chemical evolution with simulations to explain disk features, radial migration, and the thick disk formation, aligning well with observations.
Contribution
It presents a new integrated method for studying galactic evolution, linking chemical models with simulations, and offers insights into the formation of the Milky Way's thick disk.
Findings
Radial migration explains old metal-poor stars in the solar vicinity.
The age-metallicity relation shows weak scatter despite radial mixing.
The thick disk likely formed through mergers and radial migration, not quiescent evolution.
Abstract
[Abridged] In this first paper of this series, we present a new approach for studying the chemo-dynamical evolution in disk galaxies, which consists of fusing disk chemical evolution models with compatible numerical simulations of galactic disks. This method avoids known star formation and chemical enrichment problems encountered in simulations. Here we focus on the Milky Way, by using a detailed thin-disk chemical evolution model and a simulation in the cosmological context, with dynamical properties close to those of our Galaxy. We show that, due to radial migration from mergers at high redshift and the central bar at later times, a sizable fraction of old metal-poor high-[alpha/Fe] stars reaches the solar vicinity. This naturally accounts for a number of recent observations related to both the thin and thick disks, despite the fact that we use thin-disk chemistry only. Although…
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