The GALAH Survey: Chemical Clocks
Michael R. Hayden, Sanjib Sharma, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Lorenzo Spina,, Sven Buder, Martin Asplund, Andrew R. Casey, Gayandhi M. De Silva, Valentina, D'Orazi, Ken C. Freeman, Janez Kos, Geraint F. Lewis, Jane Lin, Karin Lind,, Sarah L. Martell, Katharine J. Schlesinger

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that stellar ages can be reliably estimated from chemical abundances alone using machine learning, enabling large-scale analysis of galactic evolution and kinematics.
Contribution
Introduces a machine learning method to derive stellar ages from chemical abundances for 250,000 stars, improving age estimates without relying on isochrone fitting.
Findings
Ages are accurate to 1-2 Gyr for most stars.
Chemical abundances alone can replicate known age-kinematic relations.
Chemical tagging of stars to birth clusters is challenging with current precision.
Abstract
Previous studies have found that the elemental abundances of a star correlate directly with its age and metallicity. Using this knowledge, we derive ages for a sample of 250,000 stars taken from GALAH DR3 using only their overall metallicity and chemical abundances. Stellar ages are estimated via the machine learning algorithm , using main sequence turnoff stars with precise ages as our input training set. We find that the stellar ages for the bulk of the GALAH DR3 sample are accurate to 1-2 Gyr using this method. With these ages, we replicate many recent results on the age-kinematic trends of the nearby disk, including the age-velocity dispersion relationship of the solar neighborhood and the larger global velocity dispersion relations of the disk found using and GALAH. The fact that chemical abundances alone can be used to determine a reliable age for a star have…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
