Chemical Abundances in the Milky Way's Nuclear Stellar Disc
N. Ryde, G. Nandakumar, R. Albarracin, M. Schultheis, A. Rojas-Arriagada, M. Zoccali

TL;DR
This study provides the first detailed chemical abundance analysis of the Milky Way's Nuclear Stellar Disc, revealing its similarities with other Galactic structures and demonstrating the potential for high-resolution spectroscopy in dust-obscured regions.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive chemical census of the NSD, comparing its elemental trends with other Galactic populations to understand its formation and evolutionary history.
Findings
NSD stars show chemical similarities with the inner-bulge and NSC.
Most elements follow thick-disc trends at subsolar metallicities.
Sodium exhibits a distinct trend with enhancements in NSD and NSC.
Abstract
The Nuclear Stellar Disc (NSD) is a rotating, disc-like structure in the Galactic Center, believed to have a distinct star formation. However, its formation history and evolutionary links to other structures in the Galactic Center remain uncertain. This study aims to present the first comprehensive chemical census of the NSD by deriving abundance trends for 18 elements in 9 M giants in the metallicity range of -1.0 <[Fe/H]< 0.5. By comparing these trends with those of other Galactic populations we seek to understand the chemical relationships between these structures. We obtained high-resolution H- and K-band spectra of NSD stars using the IGRINS spectrometer mounted on the Gemini South telescope. The giants were analyzed consistently with stars from a comparison populations to minimize systematic uncertainties. The abundance trends of NSD stars exhibit similarities with those of the…
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