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The Gaia-ESO Survey : Separating disk chemical substructures with cluster models. Evidence of a separate evolution in the metal-poor thin disk

Authors :
Vanessa Hill
E. Franciosini
P. de Laverny
Mathias Schultheis
John D. Lewis
Carmela Lardo
Georges Kordopatis
M. T. Costado
Simone Zaggia
Sofia Randich
Cristina Chiappini
Karin Lind
Gerard Gilmore
A. Hourihane
Sergey E. Koposov
Laura Magrini
Lorenzo Monaco
Alejandra Recio-Blanco
Šarūnas Mikolaitis
Thomas Bensby
Guillaume Guiglion
C. C. Worley
Paula Jofre
Emilio J. Alfaro
A. Rojas-Arriagada
G. G. Sacco
L. Morbidelli
Rojas-Arriagada A.
Recio-Blanco A.
De Laverny P.
Schultheis M.
Guiglion G.
Mikolaitis S.
Kordopatis G.
Hill V.
Gilmore G.
Randich S.
Alfaro E.J.
Bensby T.
Koposov S.E.
Costado M.T.
Franciosini E.
Hourihane A.
Jofre P.
Lardo C.
Lewis J.
Lind K.
Magrini L.
Monaco L.
Morbidelli L.
Sacco G.G.
Worley C.C.
Zaggia S.
Chiappini C.
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Uppsala universitet, Observationell astrofysik, 2016.

Abstract

Context. Recent spectroscopic surveys have begun to explore the Galactic disk system on the basis of large data samples, with spatial distributions sampling regions well outside the solar neighborhood. In this way, they provide valuable information for testing spatial and temporal variations of disk structure kinematics and chemical evolution. Aims: The main purposes of this study are to demonstrate the usefulness of a rigorous mathematical approach to separate substructures of a stellar sample in the abundance-metallicity plane, and provide new evidence with which to characterize the nature of the metal-poor end of the thin disk sequence. Methods: We used a Gaussian mixture model algorithm to separate in the [Mg/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] plane a clean disk star subsample (essentially at R_GC<< 10 kpc) from the Gaia-ESO survey (GES) internal data release 2 (iDR2). We aim at decomposing it into data groups highlighting number density and/or slope variations in the abundance-metallicity plane. An independent sample of disk red clump stars from the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) was used to cross-check the identified features. Results: We find that the sample is separated into five groups associated with major Galactic components; the metal-rich end of the halo, the thick disk, and three subgroups for the thin disk sequence. This is confirmed with the sample of red clump stars from APOGEE. The three thin disk groups served to explore this sequence in more detail. The two metal-intermediate and metal-rich groups of the thin disk decomposition ([Fe/H] > -0.25 dex) highlight a change in the slope at solar metallicity. This holds true at different radial regions of the Milky Way. The distribution of Galactocentric radial distances of the metal-poor part of the thin disk ([Fe/H] < -0.25 dex) is shifted to larger distances than those of the more metal-rich parts. Moreover, the metal-poor part of the thin disk presents indications of a scale height intermediate between those of the thick and the rest of the thin disk, and it displays higher azimuthal velocities than the latter. These stars might have formed and evolved in parallel and/or dissociated from the inside-out formation taking place in the internal thin disk. Their enhancement levels might be due to their origin from gas pre-enriched by outflows from the thick disk or the inner halo. The smooth trends of their properties (their spatial distribution with respect to the plane, in particular) with [Fe/H] and [Mg/Fe] suggested by the data indicates a quiet dynamical evolution, with no relevant merger events. Based on data products from observations made with ESO Telescopes at the La Silla Paranal Observatory under programme ID 188.B-3002. These data products have been processed by the Cambridge Astronomy Survey Unit (CASU) at the Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, and by the FLAMES/UVES reduction team at INAF/Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri. These data have been obtained from the Gaia-ESO Survey Data Archive, prepared and hosted by the Wide Field Astronomy Unit, Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh, which is funded by the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....16b16c8011e785303b6488e9a39debbc