The Canada-France Imaging Survey: Reconstructing the Milky Way Star Formation History from its White Dwarf Population
Nicholas J. Fantin, Patrick C\^ot\'e, Alan W. McConnachie, Pierre, Bergeron, Jean-Charles Cuillandre, Stephen D. J. Gwyn, Rodrigo A. Ibata,, Guillaume F. Thomas, Raymond G. Carlberg, S\'ebastien Fabbro, Misha Haywood,, Ariane Lan\c{c}on, Geraint F. Lewis, Khyati Malhan

TL;DR
This paper reconstructs the Milky Way's star formation history using white dwarf data from multiple surveys and introduces a new population synthesis model to interpret the observations.
Contribution
It develops a novel white dwarf population synthesis code that accounts for survey and Galactic geometry effects, enabling detailed star formation history reconstruction.
Findings
Milky Way disk began forming stars about 11.3 Gyr ago.
Star formation peaked around 9.8 Gyr ago with a rate of 8.8 M_sun/yr.
Evidence of increased star formation in the last 3 Gyr.
Abstract
As the remnants of stars with initial masses 8 M, white dwarfs contain valuable information on the formation histories of stellar populations. In this paper, we use deep, high-quality, u-band photometry from the Canada France Imaging Survey (CFIS), griz photometry from Pan-STARRS 1 (PS1), as well as proper motions from Gaia DR2, to select 25,156 white dwarf candidates over 4500 deg using a reduced proper motion diagram. We develop a new white dwarf population synthesis code that returns mock observations of the Galactic field white dwarf population for a given star formation history, while simultaneously taking into account the geometry of the Milky Way, survey parameters, and selection effects. We use this model to derive the star formation histories of the thin disk, thick disk, and stellar halo. Our results show that the Milky Way disk began forming…
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