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Chemical Cartography with APOGEE: Mapping Disk Populations with a 2-process Model and Residual Abundances

Authors :
David H. Weinberg
Jon A. Holtzman
Jennifer A. Johnson
Christian Hayes
Sten Hasselquist
Matthew Shetrone
Yuan-Sen Ting
Rachael L. Beaton
Timothy C. Beers
Jonathan C. Bird
Dmitry Bizyaev
Michael R. Blanton
Katia Cunha
José G. Fernández-Trincado
Peter M. Frinchaboy
D. A. García-Hernández
Emily Griffith
James W. Johnson
Henrik Jönsson
Richard R. Lane
Henry W. Leung
J. Ted Mackereth
Steven R. Majewski
Szabolcs Mészáros
Christian Nitschelm
Kaike Pan
Ricardo P. Schiavon
Donald P. Schneider
Mathias Schultheis
Verne Smith
Jennifer S. Sobeck
Keivan G. Stassun
Guy S. Stringfellow
Fiorenzo Vincenzo
John C. Wilson
Gail Zasowski
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 260:32
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2022.

Abstract

We apply a novel statistical analysis to measurements of 16 elemental abundances in 34,410 Milky Way disk stars from the final data release (DR17) of APOGEE-2. Building on recent work, we fit median abundance ratio trends [X/Mg] versus [Mg/H] with a 2-process model, which decomposes abundance patterns into a “prompt” component tracing core-collapse supernovae and a “delayed” component tracing Type Ia supernovae. For each sample star, we fit the amplitudes of these two components, then compute the residuals Δ[X/H] from this two-parameter fit. The rms residuals range from ∼0.01–0.03 dex for the most precisely measured APOGEE abundances to ∼0.1 dex for Na, V, and Ce. The correlations of residuals reveal a complex underlying structure, including a correlated element group comprised of Ca, Na, Al, K, Cr, and Ce and a separate group comprised of Ni, V, Mn, and Co. Selecting stars poorly fit by the 2-process model reveals a rich variety of physical outliers and sometimes subtle measurement errors. Residual abundances allow for the comparison of populations controlled for differences in metallicity and [α/Fe]. Relative to the main disk (R = 3–13 kpc), we find nearly identical abundance patterns in the outer disk (R = 15–17 kpc), 0.05–0.2 dex depressions of multiple elements in LMC and Gaia Sausage/Enceladus stars, and wild deviations (0.4–1 dex) of multiple elements in ω Cen. The residual abundance analysis opens new opportunities for discovering chemically distinctive stars and stellar populations, for empirically constraining nucleosynthetic yields, and for testing chemical evolution models that include stochasticity in the production and redistribution of elements.

Details

ISSN :
15384365 and 00670049
Volume :
260
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........835c3ef1397d745baa8c3719b41ccb26
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/ac6028