The Vertical Metallicity Gradient of the Milky Way Disk: Transitions in [a/Fe] Populations
Katharine J. Schlesinger, Jennifer A. Johnson, Constance M. Rockosi,, Young Sun Lee, Timothy C. Beers, Paul Harding, Carlos Allende Prieto,, Jonathan C. Bird, Ralph Schoenrich, Brian Yanny, Donald P. Schneider,, Benjamin A. Weaver, Jon Brinkmann

TL;DR
This study measures the vertical metallicity gradient of the Milky Way disk using over 40,000 G dwarfs from SEGUE, revealing how [a/Fe] populations relate to disk structure and star formation history.
Contribution
It provides the first large-volume measurement of the vertical metallicity gradient across different [a/Fe] populations without assuming a specific disk structure.
Findings
Overall metallicity gradient is approximately -0.24 dex/kpc.
Different [a/Fe] populations dominate at different heights.
Stars with similar [a/Fe] show little change in [Fe/H] with height.
Abstract
Using G dwarfs from the Sloan Extension for Galactic Understanding and Exploration (SEGUE) survey, we have determined a vertical metallicity gradient over a large volume of the Milky Way's disk, and examined how this gradient varies for different [a/Fe] subsamples. This sample contains over 40,000 stars with low-resolution spectroscopy over 144 lines of sight. We employ the SEGUE Stellar Parameter Pipeline (SSPP) to obtain estimates of effective temperature, surface gravity, [Fe/H], and [a/Fe] for each star and extract multiple volume-complete subsamples of approximately 1000 stars each. Based on the survey's consistent target-selection algorithm, we adjust each subsample to determine an unbiased picture of the disk in [Fe/H] and [a/Fe]; consequently, each individual star represents the properties of many. The SEGUE sample allows us to constrain the vertical metallicity gradient for a…
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