The homogeneity of the star forming environment of the Milky Way disk over time
Melissa K. Ness, Adam J. Wheeler, Kevin McKinnon, Danny Horta, Andrew, R. Casey, Emily C. Cunningham, Adrian M. Price-Whelan

TL;DR
This study investigates the chemical homogeneity of the Milky Way disk over time by analyzing stellar abundances and their relation to birth environments, revealing a high degree of uniformity in stellar formation conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a method to link stellar abundances to birth environment properties and quantifies the intrinsic scatter in element abundances at fixed birth radius and time.
Findings
Residuals correlate with stellar age and guiding radius.
Intrinsic scatter in element abundances is approximately 0.015 dex.
The disk's stellar birth environments are highly homogeneous.
Abstract
Stellar abundances and ages afford the means to link chemical enrichment to galactic formation. In the Milky Way, individual element abundances show tight correlations with age, which vary in slope across ([Fe/H]-[/Fe]). Here, we step from characterising abundances as measures of age, to understanding how abundances trace properties of stellar birth-environment in the disk over time. Using measurements from 27,000 APOGEE stars (R=22,500, SNR200), we build simple local linear models to predict a sample of elements (X = Si, O, Ca, Ti, Ni, Al, Mn, Cr) using (Fe, Mg) abundances alone, as fiducial tracers of supernovae production channels. Given [Fe/H] and [Mg/H], we predict these elements, [X/H], to about double the uncertainty of their measurements. The intrinsic dispersion, after subtracting measurement errors in quadrature is ~dex. The residuals of…
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