How the origin of stars in the Galaxy impacts the composition of planetary building blocks
N. Cabral, A. Guilbert-Lepoutre, B. Bitsch, N. Lagarde, S. Diakite

TL;DR
This study investigates how the chemical composition of stars from different Galactic populations influences the makeup of planetary building blocks, revealing robust trends and bimodal distributions across the Galaxy.
Contribution
It compares large spectroscopic surveys to determine PBB composition trends across stellar populations, confirming bimodal distributions and water content variations.
Findings
Bimodal PBB composition separates thin and thick disc stars.
Water PBB content is anti-correlated with [Fe/H].
Thick disc stars' PBBs have higher water content at low metallicity.
Abstract
Context. Our Galaxy is composed of different stellar populations with varying chemical abundances, which are thought to imprint the composition of planet building blocks (PBBs). As such, the properties of stars should affect the properties of planets and small bodies formed in their systems. In this context, high-resolution spectroscopic surveys open a window into the chemical links between and their host stars. Aims. We aim to determine the PBB composition trends for various stellar populations across the Galaxy by comparing the two large spectroscopic surveys APOGEE and GALAH. We assess the reliability of the PBB composition as determined with these surveys with a propagation error study. Methods. Stellar spectroscopic abundances from the large surveys GALAH-DR3 and APOGEE-DR17 were used as input with a stoichiometric condensation model. We classified stars into different Galactic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
