Stellar Age Compression Reshapes Interpretations of the Milky Way Thick-Disk Formation History
Zhipeng Zhang

TL;DR
This study compares two stellar age scales to show that observational biases can significantly alter interpretations of the Milky Way thick disk's formation history, challenging previous conclusions of rapid formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the perceived rapid formation of the thick disk may be an artifact of age measurement methods, emphasizing the importance of age scale choice.
Findings
Seismic ages weaken evidence for rapid thick-disk formation.
Age distribution compression can mimic rapid formation signatures.
Statistical interpretations of galaxy formation are sensitive to age measurement methods.
Abstract
The formation timescale of the Milky Way thick disk is one of the central debates in Galactic archaeology. The age-metallicity relation (AMR), formation timescale, and chemical evolution gradients are frequently used to infer a rapid assembly, short-timescale enrichment, and bursty formation history of the thick disk. However, stellar ages are not directly observable, introducing the potential risk that inferred ages may harbor a systematic compression tied to observational quality. In this paper, we use the same stellar sample and identical physical covariate matching conditions, but two independent age scales--spectroscopic inferred ages (astroNN) and asteroseismic ages (APOKASC-3)--to compare the observable signatures of the thick-disk formation history. We find that several key observables previously supporting a rapid thick-disk formation are systematically weakened under seismic…
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