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Chemical similarities between Galactic bulge and local thick disk red giants: O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca and Ti
List of Titles
Chemical similarities between Galactic bulge and local thick disk red giants: O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca and Ti
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/76581
- Title
- Chemical similarities between Galactic bulge and local thick disk red giants: O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca and Ti
- Author(s)
- Alves-Brito, A.; Melendez, J.; Asplund, M.; Ramirez, I.; Yong, D.
- Abstract
- We confirm the well-established differences for [$alpha$/Fe] at a given metallicity between the local thin and thick disks. For all the elements investigated, we find no chemical distinction between the bulge and the local thick disk, in agreement with our previous study of C, N and O but in contrast to other groups relying on literature values for nearby disk dwarf stars. For -1.5 < [Fe/H] < -0.3 exactly the same trend is followed by both the bulge and thick disk stars, with a star-to-star scatter of only 0.03 dex. Furthermore, both populations share the location of the knee in the [alpha/Fe] vs [Fe/H] diagram. It still remains to be confirmed that the local thick disk extends to super-solar metallicities as is the case for the bulge. These are the most stringent constraints to date on the chemical similarity of these stellar populations. Our findings suggest that the bulge and local thick disk stars experienced similar formation timescales, star formation rates and initial mass functions, confirming thus the main outcomes of our previous homogeneous analysis of [O/Fe] from infrared spectra for nearly the same sample. The identical alpha-enhancements of thick disk and bulge stars may reflect a rapid chemical evolution taking place before the bulge and thick disk structures we see today were formed, or it may reflect Galactic orbital migration of inner disk/bulge stars resulting in stars in the solar neighborhood with thick-disk kinematics.
- Publication type
- Journal article
- Research centre
- Swinburne University of Technology. Faculty of Information and Communication Technologies. Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing
- Source
- Astronomy and Astrophysics, Vol. 513 (Apr 2010), article no. A35
- Publication year
- 2010
- FOR Code(s)
- 0201 Astronomical and Space Sciences
- Keyword(s)
- Galactic bulge; Galaxy evolution
- Publisher
- EDP Sciences
- ISSN
- 0004-6361
- Publisher URL
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/200913444
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2010 ESO.
- Additional information
- The authors would like to acknowledge CAPES for financial support 4685-06-7 (PDE), a FAPESP fellowship no. 04/00287-9 and a Ciencia 2007 contract funded by FCT/MCTES (Portugal) and POPH/FSE (EC). This work has been supported by the Australian Research Council (DP0588836), ANSTO (06/07-0-11), National Science Foundation (AST 06-46790), and the Portuguese FCT/MCTES (project PTDC/CTE-AST/65971/2006).
- Peer reviewed


