Chemical gradients in the Milky Way from the RAVE data. II. Giant stars
C. Boeche, A. Siebert, T. Piffl, A. Just, M. Steinmetz, E. K. Grebel,, S. Sharma, G. Kordopatis, G. Gilmore, C. Chiappini, K. Freeman, B. K. Gibson,, U. Munari, A. Siviero, O. Bienaym\'e, J.F. Navarro, Q. A. Parker, W. Reid, G., M. Seabroke, F. G. Watson, R. F. G. Wyse

TL;DR
This study measures the chemical gradients of multiple elements in the Milky Way's disc using RAVE giant stars, comparing observations with a mock model to improve understanding of Galactic chemo-dynamics.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of radial and vertical chemical gradients for several elements and compares these with a simulated model, highlighting areas for model improvement.
Findings
Radial gradient of Fe is approximately -0.054 dex/kpc near the Galactic plane.
Gradients become flatter with increasing distance from the plane.
The mock model shows discrepancies in metallicity distribution and gradient steepness.
Abstract
We provide new constraints on the chemo-dynamical models of the Milky Way by measuring the radial and vertical chemical gradients for the elements Mg, Al, Si, Ti, and Fe in the Galactic disc and the gradient variations as a function of the distance from the Galactic plane (). We selected a sample of giant stars from the RAVE database using the gravity criterium 1.7log g2.8. We created a RAVE mock sample with the Galaxia code based on the Besan\c con model and selected a corresponding mock sample to compare the model with the observed data. We measured the radial gradients and the vertical gradients as a function of the distance from the Galactic plane to study their variation across the Galactic disc. The RAVE sample exhibits a negative radial gradient of dex kpc close to the Galactic plane ( kpc) that becomes flatter for larger .…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
