Exploring the stellar age distribution of the Milky Way Bulge using APOGEE
Sten Hasselquist, Gail Zasowski, Diane K. Feuillet, Mathias, Schultheis, David M. Nataf, Borja Anguiano, Rachael L. Beaton, Timothy C., Beers, Roger E. Cohen, Katia Cunha, Jos\'e G. Fern\'andez-Trincado, D. A., Garc\'ia-Hern\'andez, Doug Geisler, Jon A. Holtzman

TL;DR
This study uses APOGEE data and a novel age estimation method to analyze the Milky Way bulge, revealing it is mostly old with some younger stars in the plane, indicating complex star formation history.
Contribution
Introduces a new age determination approach for bulge stars using {\
Findings
The metal-rich bulge is predominantly old (>8 Gyr).
Faster chemical enrichment occurs near the plane.
Younger stars (2-5 Gyr) are found in the plane and inner regions.
Abstract
We present stellar age distributions of the Milky Way (MW) bulge region using ages for 6,000 high-luminosity (), metal-rich () bulge stars observed by the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE). Ages are derived using {\it The Cannon} label-transfer method, trained on a sample of nearby luminous giants with precise parallaxes for which we obtain ages using a Bayesian isochrone-matching technique. We find that the metal-rich bulge is predominantly composed of old stars (8 Gyr). We find evidence that the planar region of the bulge ( kpc) enriched in metallicity, , at a faster rate ( 0.0034 ) than regions farther from the plane ( 0.0013 at kpc). We identify a non-negligible fraction of younger stars (age 2--5…
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