Bimodal chemical evolution of the Galactic disk and the Barium abundance of Cepheids
Jacques R.D. Lepine, Sergei Andrievky, Douglas A. Barros, Thiago C., Junqueira, Sergio Scarano Jr

TL;DR
This study investigates the bimodal distribution of Barium abundance in Galactic Cepheids, considering the effects of the corotation resonance barrier on chemical evolution and star migration.
Contribution
It introduces a reinterpretation of Barium abundance data in Cepheids by accounting for the corotation barrier and star crossing, revealing a bimodal distribution in the Galactic disk.
Findings
Barium abundance shows two distinct branches beyond corotation.
Stars can migrate across the corotation barrier, affecting abundance patterns.
Barium metallicity increases with radius for stars born beyond corotation.
Abstract
In order to understand the Barium abundance distribution in the Galactic disk based on Cepheids, one must first be aware of important effects of the corotation resonance, situated a little beyond the solar orbit. The thin disk of the Galaxy is divided in two regions that are separated by a barrier situated at that radius. Since the gas cannot get across that barrier, the chemical evolution is independent on the two sides of it. The barrier is caused by the opposite directions of flows of gas, on the two sides, in addition to a Cassini-like ring void of HI (caused itself by the flows). A step in the metallicity gradient developed at corotation, due to the difference in the average star formation rate on the two sides, and to this lack of communication between them. In connection with this, a proof that the spiral arms of our Galaxy are long-lived (a few billion years) is the existence of…
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