TY - JOUR
T1 - Evidence for the Third Stellar Population in the Milky Way’s Disk
AU - Carollo, Daniela
AU - Chiba, Masashi
AU - Ishigaki, Miho
AU - Freeman, Ken
AU - Beers, Timothy C.
AU - Lee, Young Sun
AU - Tissera, Patricia
AU - Battistini, Chiara
AU - Primas, Francesca
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019, The Authors. All rights reserved.
Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2019/4/9
Y1 - 2019/4/9
N2 - The Milky Way is a unique laboratory, where stellar properties can be measured and analyzed in detail. In particular, stars in the older populations encode information on the mechanisms that led to the formation of our Galaxy. In this article, we analyze the kinematics, spatial distribution, and chemistry of a large number of stars in the Solar Neighborhood, where all of the main Galactic components are well-represented. We find that the thick disk comprises two distinct and overlapping stellar populations, with different kinematic properties and chemical compositions. The metal-weak thick disk (MWTD) contains two times less metal content than the canonical thick disk, and exhibits enrichment of light elements typical of the oldest stellar populations of the Galaxy. The rotational velocity of the MWTD around the Galactic center is ∼ 150 km s−1, corresponding to a rotational lag of 30 km s−1 relative to the canonical thick disk (∼ 180 km s−1), with a velocity dispersion of 60 km s−1. This stellar population likely originated from the merger of a dwarf galaxy during the early phases of our Galaxy’s assembly, or it is a precursor disk, formed in the inner Galaxy and brought into the Solar Neighborhood by bar instability or spiral-arm formation mechanisms.
AB - The Milky Way is a unique laboratory, where stellar properties can be measured and analyzed in detail. In particular, stars in the older populations encode information on the mechanisms that led to the formation of our Galaxy. In this article, we analyze the kinematics, spatial distribution, and chemistry of a large number of stars in the Solar Neighborhood, where all of the main Galactic components are well-represented. We find that the thick disk comprises two distinct and overlapping stellar populations, with different kinematic properties and chemical compositions. The metal-weak thick disk (MWTD) contains two times less metal content than the canonical thick disk, and exhibits enrichment of light elements typical of the oldest stellar populations of the Galaxy. The rotational velocity of the MWTD around the Galactic center is ∼ 150 km s−1, corresponding to a rotational lag of 30 km s−1 relative to the canonical thick disk (∼ 180 km s−1), with a velocity dispersion of 60 km s−1. This stellar population likely originated from the merger of a dwarf galaxy during the early phases of our Galaxy’s assembly, or it is a precursor disk, formed in the inner Galaxy and brought into the Solar Neighborhood by bar instability or spiral-arm formation mechanisms.
KW - Galaxy: formation
KW - Galaxy: stellar content
KW - Galaxy: structure
KW - Stars: Population II
KW - Stars: stellar dynamics
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M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85095243533
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ER -