3D elemental abundances of stars at formation across the histories of Milky Way-mass galaxies in the FIRE simulations
Matthew A. Bellardini, Andrew Wetzel, Sarah R. Loebman, and Jeremy, Bailin

TL;DR
This study investigates the 3D spatial variations of elemental abundances in stars at formation within simulated Milky Way-like galaxies, revealing how these variations evolve over cosmic time and informing chemical tagging efforts.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the evolution of abundance gradients and azimuthal scatter in stellar populations, with analytic fits for chemical tagging applications.
Findings
Abundance scatter decreased until ~7 Gyr ago, then increased.
Radial abundance gradients generally steepened over time.
Azimuthal scatter decreased from 0.17 to 0.04 dex over time.
Abstract
We characterize the 3-D spatial variations of [Fe/H], [Mg/H], and [Mg/Fe] in stars at the time of their formation, across 11 simulated Milky Way (MW)- and M31-mass galaxies in the FIRE-2 simulations, to inform initial conditions for chemical tagging. The overall scatter in [Fe/H] within a galaxy decreased with time until Gyr ago, after which it increased to today: this arises from a competition between a reduction of azimuthal scatter and a steepening of the radial gradient in abundance over time. The radial gradient is generally negative, and it steepened over time from an initially flat gradient Gyr ago. The strength of the present-day abundance gradient does not correlate with when the disk `settled'; instead, it best correlates with the radial velocity dispersion within the galaxy. The strength of azimuthal variation is nearly independent of radius, and the…
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