The GALAH survey: properties of the Galactic disk(s) in the solar neighbourhood
L. Duong (1), K. C. Freeman (1), M. Asplund (1), L. Casagrande (1), S., Buder (2), K. Lind (2), M. Ness (2), J. Bland-Hawthorn (3), G. M. De Silva, (3), V. D'Orazi (4), J. Kos (3), G. F. Lewis (3), J. Lin (1), S. L. Martell, (13), K. Schlesinger (1), S. Sharma (3)

TL;DR
This study uses GALAH survey data to analyze the vertical structure and chemical properties of the Milky Way's thin and thick disks near the Sun, revealing distinct metallicity and alpha-abundance gradients that inform disk formation models.
Contribution
First detailed measurement of vertical metallicity and alpha-abundance profiles of the Galactic thin and thick disks using GALAH data, highlighting their different formation histories.
Findings
Thin disk has a steep negative metallicity gradient with height.
Thick disk shows a weaker metallicity gradient and nearly constant alpha-abundance.
Results support models where radial migration influences thin disk evolution.
Abstract
Using data from the GALAH pilot survey, we determine properties of the Galactic thin and thick disks near the solar neighbourhood. The data cover a small range of Galactocentric radius ( kpc), but extend up to 4 kpc in height from the Galactic plane, and several kpc in the direction of Galactic anti-rotation (at longitude ). This allows us to reliably measure the vertical density and abundance profiles of the chemically and kinematically defined `thick' and `thin' disks of the Galaxy. The thin disk (low- population) exhibits a steep negative vertical metallicity gradient, at d[M/H]/d dex kpc, which is broadly consistent with previous studies. In contrast, its vertical -abundance profile is almost flat, with a gradient of d[/M]/d = dex kpc.…
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