The age structure of stellar populations in the solar vicinity. Clues of a two-phase formation history of the Milky Way disk
M. Haywood, P. Di Matteo, M. Lehnert, D. Katz, A. Gomez

TL;DR
This study investigates the age and chemical composition of stars in the solar neighborhood, revealing a two-phase formation history of the Milky Way disk with implications for galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It provides new evidence for distinct thick and thin disk formation epochs, highlighting the role of the thick disk in setting initial conditions for the thin disk.
Findings
Two distinct [alpha/Fe] versus age regimes identified
Thick disk formed over 4-5 Gyr from a well-mixed ISM
Outer thin disk likely developed outside the influence of the thick disk
Abstract
We analyze high quality abundances data of solar neighborhood stars and show that there are two distinct regimes of [alpha/Fe] versus age which we identify as the epochs of the thick and thin disk formation. A tight correlation between metallicity and [alpha/Fe] versus age is clearly identifiable on thick disk stars, implying that this population formed from a well mixed ISM, over a time scale of 4-5 Gyr. Thick disk stars vertical velocity dispersion correlate with age, with the youngest objects having as small scale heights as those of thin disk stars. A natural consequence of these two results is that a vertical metallicity gradient is expected in this population. We suggest that the thick disk set the initial conditions for the formation of the inner thin disk. This provides also an explanation of the apparent coincidence between the step in metallicity at 7-10 kpc in the thin disk…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science
