The relationship between mono-abundance and mono-age stellar populations in the Milky Way disk
I. Minchev, M. Steinmetz, C. Chiappini, M. Martig, F. Anders, G., Matijevic, and R. S. de Jong

TL;DR
This study examines the relationship between mono-abundance and mono-age stellar populations in the Milky Way disk, revealing that only high-[alpha/Fe] populations are truly coeval, impacting how we interpret galactic structure data.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that mono-abundance populations are not always mono-age, especially at lower [alpha/Fe], highlighting the importance of accurate age measurements for galactic studies.
Findings
High-[alpha/Fe] MAPs are approximately coeval.
Lower-[alpha/Fe] MAPs contain a range of stellar ages.
Radial age gradients can be as large as 2 Gyr/kpc.
Abstract
Studying the Milky Way disk structure using stars in narrow bins of [Fe/H] and [alpha/Fe] has recently been proposed as a powerful method to understand the Galactic thick and thin disk formation. It has been assumed so far that these mono-abundance populations (MAPs) are also coeval, or mono-age, populations. Here we study this relationship for a Milky Way chemo-dynamical model and show that equivalence between MAPs and mono-age populations exists only for the high-[alpha/Fe] tail, where the chemical evolution curves of different Galactic radii are far apart. At lower [alpha/Fe]-values a MAP is composed of stars with a range in ages, even for small observational uncertainties and a small MAP bin size. Due to the disk inside-out formation, for these MAPs younger stars are typically located at larger radii, which results in negative radial age gradients that can be as large as 2 Gyr/kpc.…
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