The AMBRE project: Iron-peak elements in the solar neighbourhood
\v{S}. Mikolaitis, P. de Laverny, A. Recio-Blanco, V. Hill, C. C., Worley, M. de Pascale

TL;DR
This study characterizes the abundance patterns of five iron-peak elements in 4666 stars, revealing distinct trends among Galactic substructures and highlighting areas where theoretical models need improvement.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of iron-peak element abundances across different Galactic populations using automated methods, and compares observations with chemical evolution models.
Findings
High-alpha and low-alpha populations are distinct in Mg, Cu, and Zn.
Thin and thick disc trends of Ni and Cu are similar and indistinguishable.
Models partially reproduce observed behaviors, but struggle with Mn and Ni yields.
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to characterise the abundance patterns of five iron-peak elements (Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, and Zn) for which the stellar origin and chemical evolution are still debated. We automatically derived iron peak (Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, and Zn) and alpha element (Mg) chemical abundances for 4666 stars. We used the bimodal distribution of [Mg/Fe] to chemically classify sample stars into different Galactic substructures: thin disc, metal-poor and high-alpha metal rich, high-alpha and low-alpha metal-poor populations. High-alpha and low-alpha metal-poor populations are fully distinct in Mg, Cu, and Zn. Thin disc trends of [Ni/Fe] and [Cu/Fe] are very similar and show a small increase at supersolar metallicities. Thin and thick disc trends of Ni and Cu are very similar and indistinguishable. Mn looks different from Ni and Cu. [Mn/Fe] trends of thin and thick discs actually have noticeable…
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