Birth of the Galactic Disk Revealed by the H3 Survey
Charlie Conroy, David H. Weinberg, Rohan P. Naidu, Tobias Buck, James, W. Johnson, Phillip Cargile, Ana Bonaca, Nelson Caldwell, Vedant Chandra,, Jiwon Jesse Han, Benjamin D. Johnson, Joshua S. Speagle, Yuan-Sen Ting,, Turner Woody, Dennis Zaritsky

TL;DR
This study uses chemical, age, and kinematic data from the H3 Survey and Gaia to identify the birth of the Galactic disk, revealing a transition from a simmering to boiling phase around 13 billion years ago.
Contribution
It provides new evidence for the Galactic disk's formation through a detailed analysis of stellar populations and their properties, highlighting a significant phase transition in galaxy evolution.
Findings
In-situ high-alpha stars are very old at low metallicity and show non-monotonic chemical behavior.
The number of in-situ stars increases rapidly above [Fe/H]=-1.
Kinematics evolve from hot and disordered to cold and disk-like at higher metallicities.
Abstract
We use chemistry ([alpha/Fe] and [Fe/H]), main sequence turnoff ages, and kinematics determined from H3 Survey spectroscopy and Gaia astrometry to identify the birth of the Galactic disk. We separate in-situ and accreted stars on the basis of angular momenta and eccentricities. The sequence of high-alpha in-situ stars persists down to at least [Fe/H]=-2.5 and shows unexpected non-monotonic behavior: with increasing metallicity the population first declines in [alpha/Fe], then increases over the range -1.3<[Fe/H]<-0.7, and then declines again at higher metallicities. The number of stars in the in-situ population rapidly increases above [Fe/H]=-1. The average kinematics of these stars are hot and independent of metallicity at [Fe/H]<-1 and then become increasingly cold and disk-like at higher metallicities. The ages of the in-situ, high-alpha stars are uniformly very old (13 Gyr) at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
