Stellar Abundance Maps of the Milky Way Disk
Anna-Christina Eilers, David W. Hogg, Hans-Walter Rix, Melissa K., Ness, Adrian M. Price-Whelan, Szabolcs Meszaros, Christian Nitschelm

TL;DR
This study develops a self-calibration method to map chemical abundances across the Milky Way, revealing no bar-related abundance variations and providing the most precise metallicity gradient to date.
Contribution
A new self-calibration approach for stellar abundance measurements enables detailed spatial mapping of the Milky Way's disk, overcoming previous systematic uncertainties.
Findings
No abundance variations match the bar's geometry.
High-$\\alpha$ disk is chemically homogeneous.
Most precise [Fe/H] gradient with slope -0.057 dex/kpc.
Abstract
To understand the formation of the Milky Way's prominent bar it is important to know whether stars in the bar differ in the chemical element composition of their birth material as compared to disk stars. This requires stellar abundance measurements for large samples across the Milky Way's body. Such samples, e.g. luminous red giant stars observed by SDSS's Apogee survey, will inevitably span a range of stellar parameters; as a consequence, both modelling imperfections and stellar evolution may preclude consistent and precise estimates of their chemical composition at a level of purported bar signatures, which has left current analyses of a chemically distinct bar inconclusive. Here, we develop a new self-calibration approach to eliminate both modelling and astrophysical abundance systematics among red giant branch (RGB) stars of different luminosities (and hence surface gravity $\log…
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