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The chemical properties of the Milky Way's on-bar and off-bar regions: evidence for inhomogeneous star formation history in the bulge

Authors :
Lian, Jianhui
Zasowski, Gail
Hasselquist, Sten
Neumann, Justus
Majewski, Steven R.
Cohen, Roger E.
Fernández-Trincado, José G.
Lane, Richard R.
Longa-Peña, Penélope
Roman-Lopes, Alexandre
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Numerous studies of integrated starlight, stellar counts, and kinematics have confirmed that the Milky Way is a barred galaxy. However, far fewer studies have investigated the bar's stellar population properties, which carry valuable independent information regarding the bar's formation history. Here we conduct a detailed analysis of chemical abundance distributions ([Fe/H] and [Mg/Fe]) in the on-bar and off-bar regions to study the azimuthal variation of star formation history (SFH) in the inner Galaxy. We find that the on-bar and off-bar stars at Galactocentric radii 3 $< r_{\rm GC}<$ 5 kpc have remarkably consistent [Fe/H] and [Mg/Fe] distribution functions and [Mg/Fe]--[Fe/H] relation, suggesting a common SFH shared by the long bar and the disc. In contrast, the bar and disc at smaller radii (2 $< r_{\rm GC} <$ 3 kpc) show noticeable differences, with relatively more very metal-rich ([Fe/H]~0.4) stars but fewer solar abundance stars in the bar. Given the three-phase star formation history proposed for the inner Galaxy in Lian et al. (2020b), these differences could be explained by the off-bar disc having experienced either a faster early quenching process or recent metal-poor gas accretion. Vertical variations of the abundance distributions at small $r_{\rm GC}$ suggest a wider vertical distribution of low-$\alpha$ stars in the bar, which may serve as chemical evidence for vertical heating through the bar buckling process. The lack of such vertical variations outside the bulge may then suggest a lack of vertical heating in the long bar.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. MNRAS in press

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2008.03320
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa3256