Chemical Cartography with APOGEE: Metallicity Distribution Functions and the Chemical Structure of the Milky Way Disk
Michael R. Hayden, Jo Bovy, Jon A. Holtzman, David L. Nidever,, Jonathan C. Bird, David H. Weinberg, Brett H. Andrews, Carlos Allende Prieto,, Friedrich Anders, Timothy C. Beers, Dmitry Bizyaev, Cristina Chiappini, Katia, Cunha, Peter Frinchaboy, Domingo A. Garc\'ia-Her\'nandez

TL;DR
This study uses APOGEE data to map the chemical composition and metallicity distribution of the Milky Way disk, revealing distinct stellar populations and gradients that inform galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed chemical cartography of the Milky Way disk across a large volume, identifying multiple stellar sequences and the impact of radial migration.
Findings
Inner disk stars follow a single [$\alpha$/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] track.
Two distinct [$\alpha$/Fe] sequences are observed at larger radii.
The MDF shape varies systematically with galactic radius, indicating radial migration effects.
Abstract
Using a sample of 69,919 red giants from the SDSS-III/APOGEE Data Release 12, we measure the distribution of stars in the [/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] plane and the metallicity distribution functions (MDF) across an unprecedented volume of the Milky Way disk, with radius kpc and height kpc. Stars in the inner disk ( kpc) lie along a single track in [/Fe] vs. [Fe/H], starting with -enhanced, metal-poor stars and ending at [/Fe] and [Fe/H]. At larger radii we find two distinct sequences in [/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] space, with a roughly solar- sequence that spans a decade in metallicity and a high- sequence that merges with the low- sequence at super-solar [Fe/H]. The location of the high- sequence is nearly constant across the disk, however there are very few high- stars at kpc. The…
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