Reconstructing the star formation history of the Milky Way disc(s) from chemical abundances
O. Snaith, M. Haywood, P. Di Matteo, M. D. Lehnert, F. Combes, D., Katz, A. G\'omez

TL;DR
This study develops a chemical evolution model to accurately reconstruct the Milky Way's star formation history, revealing distinct phases and the influence of gas accretion and turbulence in different galactic regions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method that fits chemical abundance trends with age to recover the Galaxy's star formation history without fixing the star formation law.
Findings
Inner disc formed half of its stars during the thick disc phase.
A significant dip in star formation occurred at 8-9 Gyr.
Outer disc's star formation history is similar but initiated earlier.
Abstract
We develop a chemical evolution model in order to study the star formation history of the Milky Way. Our model assumes that the Milky Way is formed from a closed box-like system in the inner regions, while the outer parts of the disc experience some accretion. Unlike the usual procedure, we do not fix the star formation prescription (e.g. Kennicutt law) in order to reproduce the chemical abundance trends. Instead, we fit the abundance trends with age in order to recover the star formation history of the Galaxy. Our method enables one to recover with unprecedented accuracy the star formation history of the Milky Way in the first Gyrs, in both the inner (R<7-8kpc) and outer (R>9-10kpc) discs as sampled in the solar vicinity. We show that, in the inner disc, half of the stellar mass formed during the thick disc phase, in the first 4-5 Gyr. This phase was followed by a significant dip in…
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