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The Open Cluster Chemical Abundances and Mapping Survey: IV. Abundances for 128 Open Clusters using SDSS/APOGEE DR16

Authors :
Donor, John
Frinchaboy, Peter M.
Cunha, Katia
O'Connell, Julia E.
Prieto, Carlos Allende
Almeida, Andres
Anders, Friedrich
Beaton, Rachael
Bizyaev, Dmitry
Brownstein, Joel R.
Carrera, Ricardo
Chiappini, Cristina
Cohen, Roger
Garcia-Hernandez, D. A.
Geisler, Doug
Hasselquist, Sten
Jonsson, Henrik
Lane, Richard R.
Majewski, Steven R.
Minniti, Dante
Bidin, Christian Moni
Pan, Kaike
Roman-Lopes, Alexandre
Sobeck, Jennifer S.
Zasowski, Gail
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The Open Cluster Chemical Abundances and Mapping (OCCAM) survey aims to constrain key Galactic dynamical and chemical evolution parameters by the construction of a large, comprehensive, uniform, infrared-based spectroscopic data set of hundreds of open clusters. This fourth contribution from the OCCAM survey presents analysis using SDSS/APOGEE DR16 of a sample of 128 open clusters, 71 of which we designate to be "high quality" based on the appearance of their color-magnitude diagram. We find the APOGEE DR16 derived [Fe/H] abundances to be in good agreement with previous high resolution spectroscopic open cluster abundance studies. Using the high quality sample, we measure Galactic abundance gradients in 16 elements, and find evolution of some of the [X/Fe] gradients as a function of age. We find an overall Galactic [Fe/H] vs R_GC gradient of $-0.068 \pm 0.001$ dex kpc$^{-1}$ over the range of $6 <$ R_GC $< 13.9$ kpc; however, we note that this result is sensitive to the distance catalog used, varying as much as 15%. We formally derive the location a break in the [Fe/H] abundance gradient as a free parameter in the gradient fit for the first time. We also measure significant Galactic gradients in O, Mg, S, Ca, Mn, Cr, Cu, Na, Al, and K, some of which are measured for the first time. Our large sample allows us to explore four well-populated age bins to explore the time evolution of gradients for a large number of elements and comment on possible implications for Galactic chemical evolution and radial migration.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, Accepted for publication by AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2002.08980
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ab77bc