Red giants observed by CoRoT and APOGEE: The evolution of the Milky Way's radial metallicity gradient
F. Anders, C. Chiappini, I. Minchev, A. Miglio, J. Montalb\'an, B., Mosser, T. S. Rodrigues, B. X. Santiago, F. Baudin, T. C. Beers, L. N. da, Costa, R. A. Garc\'ia, D. A. Garc\'ia-Hern\'andez, J. Holtzman, M. A. G., Maia, S. Majewski, S. Mathur, A. Noels-Grotsch, K. Pan

TL;DR
This study combines asteroseismic and spectroscopic data of 418 red giants to analyze how the Milky Way's radial metallicity gradient has evolved over time, revealing a complex pattern of flattening and steepening linked to stellar migration.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed age-dependent measurement of the Milky Way's radial metallicity gradient using combined asteroseismic and spectroscopic observations.
Findings
The young red-giant population has a radial iron gradient of -0.058 dex/kpc.
The gradient for 1-4 Gyr old stars is steeper at -0.066 dex/kpc.
The gradient flattens to about -0.03 dex/kpc for stars aged 6-10 Gyr.
Abstract
Using combined asteroseismic and spectroscopic observations of 418 red-giant stars close to the Galactic disc plane (6 kpc kpc, kpc), we measure the age dependence of the radial metallicity distribution in the Milky Way's thin disc over cosmic time. The slope of the radial iron gradient of the young red-giant population ( [stat.] [syst.] dex/kpc) is consistent with recent Cepheid measurements. For stellar populations with ages of Gyr the gradient is slightly steeper, at a value of dex/kpc, and then flattens again to reach a value of dex/kpc for stars with ages between 6 and 10 Gyr. Our results are in good agreement with a state-of-the-art chemo-dynamical Milky-Way model in which the evolution of the abundance gradient and its scatter can be entirely explained by a…
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