Chemical radial gradients for the bulge-bar stellar populations from the APOGEE survey
J. V. Sales-Silva, K. Cunha, V. V. Smith, S. Daflon, D. Souto, R. Guer\c{c}o, V. Loaiza-Tacuri, A. Queiroz, C. Chiappini, I. Minchev, S. R. Majewski, B. Barbuy, D. Bizyaev, J. G. Fern\'andez-Trincado, P. M. Frinchaboy, S. Hasselquist, D. Horta, H. J\"onsson, T. Masseron

TL;DR
This study analyzes chemical and kinematic data from the APOGEE survey to characterize the metallicity gradients of different stellar populations in the Milky Way's bulge and bar, revealing complex chemical structures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed chemical and orbital classification of bulge-bar populations, revealing distinct metallicity gradient patterns and their implications for galaxy evolution.
Findings
Low-[Mg/Fe] low-eccentricity stars show negative metallicity gradients.
High-[Mg/Fe] bar stars exhibit steep positive [X/H] gradients.
Neutron-capture elements do not follow Fe gradients.
Abstract
The Milky Way bulge-bar is composed of multiple populations. Using chemical and kinematical planes, we segregate six populations in a bulge-bar sample observed by the APOGEE survey: two with bar-driven orbits, two with eccentric orbits, and two with low-eccentricity orbits, each composed of low- and high-[Mg/Fe] stars. Our sample spans [Fe/H] and Galactocentric distance kpc. We use chemical abundances from APOGEE DR17 for the elements Mg, Si, Ca, Al, K, Mn, Co, Ni, and Fe, and from the BAWLAS catalog for Ce and Nd. We find that the low- and high-[Mg/Fe] stars with low-eccentricity orbits, which exhibit chemical and orbital characteristics similar to those of the low- and high-[/Fe] disks, display slightly negative and positive metallicity gradients, respectively. This result for the low-[Mg/Fe] low-eccentricity stars indicates a break…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
