The Age-Thickness Relation of the Milky Way Disk: A Tracer of Galactic Merging History
Lekshmi Thulasidharan, Elena D'Onghia, Robert Benjamin and, Ronald Drimmel, Eloisa Poggio, Anna Queiroz

TL;DR
This study links the Milky Way's disk thickness to its merger history, revealing major and minor merger events over billions of years through stellar age and simulation analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method using disk thickness and stellar ages to trace the galaxy's merger history, supported by observational data and simulations.
Findings
Major merger around 11.13 billion years ago identified
Geometric thick disk formed approximately 11.13 billion years ago
Multiple recent interactions with Sagittarius dwarf galaxy detected
Abstract
The prevailing model of galaxy formation proposes that galaxies like the Milky Way are built through a series of mergers with smaller galaxies over time. However, the exact details of the Milky Way's assembly history remain uncertain. In this study, we show that the Milky Way's merger history is uniquely encoded in the vertical thickness of its stellar disk. By leveraging age estimates from the value-added LAMOST DR8 catalog and the StarHorse ages from SDSS-IV DR12 data, we investigate the relationship between disk thickness and stellar ages in the Milky Way using a sample comprising Red Giants (RG), Red Clump Giants (RCG), and metal-poor stars (MPS). Guided by the IllustrisTNG50 simulations, we show that an increase in the dispersion of the vertical displacement of stars in the disk traces its merger history. This analysis reveals the epoch of a major merger event that assembled the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
