Quantifying chemical and kinematical properties of Galactic disks

Abstract

We aim to quantify the chemical and kinematical properties of the Galactic disks with a sample of 119,558 giant stars having abundances and 3D velocities taken or derived from the APOGEE DR17 and Gaia EDR3 catalogs. The Gaussian Mixture Model is employed to distinguish the high-α and low-α sequences along the metallicity by simutaneously using the chemical and kinematical data. Four disk components are identified and quantified that named as hαmp, hαmr, lαmp, and lαmr disks, which correspond to the features of high-α or low-α, and metal-poor or metal-rich. Combined with the spatial and stellar age information, we confirm that they are well interpreted in the two-infall formation model. The first infall of turbulent gas quickly forms the hot and thick hαmp disk with consequent thinner hαmr and lαmr disks. Then the second gas accretion forms a thinner and outermost lαmp disk. We find that the inside-out and upside-down scenario does not only satisfy the overall Galactic disk formation of these two major episodes, but also presents in the formation sequence of three inner disks. Importantly, we reveal the inverse Age-[M/H] trend of the lαmr disk, which means its younger stars are more metal-poor, indicating that the rejuvenate gas from the second accretion gradually dominates the later star formation. Meanwhile, the recently formed stars convergence to [M/H]-0.1 dex, demonstrating a sufficiently mixture of gas from two infalls.

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