Tracing chemical evolution over the extent of the Milky Way's Disk with APOGEE Red Clump Stars
David L. Nidever, Jo Bovy, Jonathan C. Bird, Brett H. Andrews, Michael, Hayden, Jon Holtzman, Steven R. Majewski, Verne Smith, Annie C. Robin, Ana E., Garcia Perez, Katia Cunha, Carlos Allende Prieto, Gail Zasowski, Ricardo P., Schiavon, Jennifer A. Johnson, David H. Weinberg

TL;DR
This study uses APOGEE data to analyze the distribution of metallicity and alpha-element abundances in Milky Way disk stars, revealing consistent abundance patterns and insights into the galaxy's chemical evolution.
Contribution
First large-scale analysis of alpha-element distributions across the Milky Way disk using APOGEE data, revealing bimodality and uniformity in high-alpha sequences.
Findings
Alpha-element bimodality at intermediate metallicities
Constant high-alpha sequence across the Galaxy
Inner Galaxy can be modeled with a single evolutionary track
Abstract
We employ the first two years of data from the near-infrared, high-resolution SDSS-III/APOGEE spectroscopic survey to investigate the distribution of metallicity and alpha-element abundances of stars over a large part of the Milky Way disk. Using a sample of ~10,000 kinematically-unbiased red-clump stars with ~5% distance accuracy as tracers, the [alpha/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] distribution of this sample exhibits a bimodality in [alpha/Fe] at intermediate metallicities, -0.9<[Fe/H]<-0.2, but at higher metallicities ([Fe/H]=+0.2) the two sequences smoothly merge. We investigate the effects of the APOGEE selection function and volume filling fraction and find that these have little qualitative impact on the alpha-element abundance patterns. The described abundance pattern is found throughout the range 5<R<11 kpc and 0<|Z|<2 kpc across the Galaxy. The [alpha/Fe] trend of the high-alpha sequence is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
