The individual abundance distributions of disc stars across birth radii in GALAH

Abstract

Individual abundances in the Milky Way disc record stellar birth properties (e.g. age, birth radius (R birth)) and capture the diversity of the star-forming environments over time. Assuming an analytical relationship between ([Fe/H], [α/Fe]) and R birth, we examine the distributions of individual abundances [X/Fe] of elements C, O, Mg, Si, Ca (α), Al (odd-z), Mn (iron-peak), Y, and Ba (neutron-capture) for stars in the Milky Way. We want to understand how these elements might differentiate environments across the disc. We assign tracks of R birth in the [α/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] plane as informed by expectations from simulations for 59,000 GALAH stars in the solar neighborhood (R7-9 kpc) which also have inferred ages. Our formalism for R birth shows that older stars (10 Gyrs) have a R birth distribution with smaller mean values (i.e., Rbirth50.8 kpc) compared to younger stars (6 Gyrs; Rbirth101.5 kpc), for a given [Fe/H], consistent with inside-out growth. The α-, odd-z, and iron-peak element abundances decrease as a function of R birth, whereas the neutron-capture abundances increase. The R birth-[Fe/H] gradient we measure is steeper compared to the present-day gradient (-0.067 dex/kpc vs -0.058 dex/kpc), which we also find true for R birth-[X/Fe] gradients. These results (i) showcase the feasibility of relating the birth radius of stars to their element abundances, (ii) the abundance gradients across R birth are steeper than those over current radius, and (iii) offer an observational comparison to expectations on element abundance distributions from hydrodynamical simulations.

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