TL;DR
This study analyzes the spatial and chemical structure of stellar populations in the Milky Way disk using APOGEE data, revealing distinct radial and vertical profiles that inform models of Galactic evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of mono-abundance populations' structure, highlighting their radial and vertical profiles and challenging previous assumptions about disk flaring and migration effects.
Findings
Enhanced [a/Fe] populations are centrally concentrated with exponential profiles.
Low-[a/Fe] populations show complex, non-monotonic radial profiles.
High-[a/Fe] populations do not flare, supporting inside-out disk growth.
Abstract
The spatial structure of stellar populations with different chemical abundances in the Milky Way contains a wealth of information on Galactic evolution over cosmic time. We use data on 14,699 red-clump stars from the APOGEE survey, covering 4 kpc <~ R <~ 15 kpc, to determine the structure of mono-abundance populations (MAPs)---stars in narrow bins in [a/Fe] and [Fe/H]---accounting for the complex effects of the APOGEE selection function and the spatially-variable dust obscuration. We determine that all MAPs with enhanced [a/Fe] are centrally concentrated and are well-described as exponentials with a scale length of 2.2+/-0.2 kpc over the whole radial range of the disk. We discover that the surface-density profiles of low-[a/Fe] MAPs are complex: they do not monotonically decrease outwards, but rather display a peak radius ranging from ~5 kpc to ~13 kpc at low [Fe/H]. The extensive…
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