论文标题
Apogee-DR16和Gaia-Dr2揭示的薄和厚盘的共形成
Co-formation of the thin and thick discs revealed by APOGEE-DR16 and Gaia-DR2
论文作者
论文摘要
由于薄圆盘恒星平均比厚的圆盘恒星小,因此某些型号预测薄圆盘将在厚盘形成后开始形成,大约是10 Gyr。因此,不应存在重要的旧光盘种群。使用GAIA-DR2的6-D坐标以及Sanders&Das(2018)的年龄估计,我们选择$ \ sim 24000 $ Old Stars($ {τ> 10} $ Gyr,不确定性$ \ Lessim 15 \%$ 15 \%$)在2 kpc之内(来自太阳的太阳(完整样品)。与Apogee-DR16($ \ sim 1000 $ stars)的交叉匹配显示旧化学定义的薄/厚盘星的可比分数。我们表明,完整的样本中心半径($ r_ \ mathrm {per} $)具有三个峰,一个峰与恒星光环有关,另外两个则具有薄/厚的圆盘的贡献。使用高分辨率$ n $ body+光滑的粒子流体动力学模拟,我们证明了一个峰,$ r_ \ mathrm {per} \大约7.1 $ kpc,是由两个圆盘的恒星产生的,这些圆盘出生在内部银河系中,并迁移到太阳能社区。在太阳能社区中,$ \ sim 1/2 $($ \ sim 1/3 $)的旧薄(厚)圆盘星被归类为迁移者。我们的结果表明,无论垂直尺度的高度如何,径向迁移的偏心分布都不同,因此对径向迁移的影响有所不同,因为它们具有不同的偏心分布。我们将重要的旧光盘种群的存在解释为薄/厚盘的早期共同形成的证据,认为早期盘中的团块不稳定性为观察到的趋势提供了令人信服的解释。
Since thin disc stars are younger than thick disc stars on average, the thin disc is predicted by some models to start forming after the thick disc had formed, around 10 Gyr ago. Accordingly, no significant old thin disc population should exist. Using 6-D coordinates from Gaia-DR2 and age estimates from Sanders & Das (2018), we select $\sim 24000$ old stars (${τ> 10}$ Gyr, with uncertainties $\lesssim 15\%$) within 2 kpc from the Sun (full sample). A cross-match with APOGEE-DR16 ($\sim 1000$ stars) reveals comparable fractions of old chemically defined thin/thick disc stars. We show that the full sample pericenter radius ($r_\mathrm{per}$) distribution has three peaks, one associated with the stellar halo and the other two having contributions from the thin/thick discs. Using a high-resolution $N$-body+Smooth Particle Hydrodynamics simulation, we demonstrate that one peak, at $r_\mathrm{per}\approx 7.1$ kpc, is produced by stars from both discs which were born in the inner Galaxy and migrated to the Solar Neighbourhood. In the Solar Neighbourhood, $\sim 1/2$ ($\sim 1/3$) of the old thin (thick) disc stars are classified as migrators. Our results suggest that thin/thick discs are affected differently by radial migration inasmuch as they have different eccentricity distributions, regardless of vertical scale heights. We interpret the existence of a significant old thin disc population as evidence for an early co-formation of thin/thick discs, arguing that clump instabilities in the early disc offer a compelling explanation for the observed trends.