The Gaia-ESO Survey: Separating disk chemical substructures with cluster models
A. Rojas-Arriagada, A. Recio-Blanco, P. de Laverny, M. Schultheis, G., Guiglion, \v{S}. Mikolaitis, G. Kordopatis, V. Hill, G. Gilmore, S. Randich,, E. J. Alfaro, T. Bensby, S. E. Koposov, M. T. Costado, E. Franciosini, A., Hourihane, P. Jofr\'e, C. Lardo, J. Lewis, K. Lind

TL;DR
This study uses Gaussian mixture models on Gaia-ESO survey data to identify and analyze distinct chemical substructures within the Galactic disk, revealing insights into their formation and evolution.
Contribution
The paper introduces a rigorous Gaussian mixture model approach to separate disk star populations in chemical space, confirming five major groups and analyzing their spatial and kinematic properties.
Findings
Identification of five distinct Galactic disk components
Metallicity-dependent spatial distribution of thin disk stars
Evidence for inside-out formation and minimal merger influence
Abstract
(Abridged) Recent spectroscopic surveys have begun to explore the Galactic disk system outside the solar neighborhood on the basis of large data samples. In this way, they provide valuable information for testing spatial and temporal variations of disk structure kinematics and chemical evolution. We used a Gaussian mixture model algorithm, as a rigurous mathematical approach, to separate in the [Mg/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] plane a clean disk star subsample from the Gaia-ESO survey internal data release 2. We find that the sample is separated into five groups associated with major Galactic components; the metal-rich end of the halo, the thick disk, and three subgroups for the thin disk sequence. This is confirmed with a sample of red clump stars from the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) survey. The two metal-intermediate and metal-rich groups of the thin disk…
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