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The K2-HERMES Survey: age and metallicity of the thick disc

Authors :
James Esdaile
Valentina D'Orazi
Sanjib Sharma
Tomaz Zwitter
Joel C. Zinn
Shourya Khanna
Jonathan Horner
Marc Hon
Thomas Nordlander
Kenneth C. Freeman
Janez Kos
Yuan-Sen Ting
Jane Lin
Geraint F. Lewis
Michael R. Hayden
Jeffrey D. Simpson
Sarah L. Martell
Boquan Chen
Gayandhi M. De Silva
David M. Nataf
Rosemary F. G. Wyse
Mohd Hafiz Mohd Saadon
Thomas Kallinger
Daniel Huber
Martin Asplund
Daniel B. Zucker
Klemen Čotar
Karin Lind
Dennis Stello
Gregor Traven
Sven Buder
Prajwal R. Kafle
Timothy R. Bedding
Robert A. Wittenmyer
Joss Bland-Hawthorn
Tanda Li
Duncan J. Wright
Source :
Sharma, S, Stello, D, Bland-Hawthorn, J, Hayden, M R, Zinn, J C, Kallinger, T, Hon, M, Asplund, M, Buder, S, de Silva, G M, D'Orazi, V, Freeman, K, Kos, J, Lewis, G F, Lin, J, Lind, K, Martell, S, Simpson, J D, Wittenmyer, R A, Zucker, D B, Zwitter, T, Bedding, T R, Chen, B, Cotar, K, Esdaile, J, Horner, J, Huber, D, Kafle, P R, Khanna, S, Li, T, Ting, Y S, Nataf, D M, Nordlander, T, Saadon, M H M, Traven, G, Wright, D & Wyse, R F G 2019, ' The K2-HERMES survey : Age and metallicity of the thick disc ', Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 490, no. 4, pp. 5335-5352 . https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2861
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019.

Abstract

Asteroseismology is a promising tool to study Galactic structure and evolution because it can probe the ages of stars. Earlier attempts comparing seismic data from the {\it Kepler} satellite with predictions from Galaxy models found that the models predicted more low-mass stars compared to the observed distribution of masses. It was unclear if the mismatch was due to inaccuracies in the Galactic models, or the unknown aspects of the selection function of the stars. Using new data from the K2 mission, which has a well-defined selection function, we find that an old metal-poor thick disc, as used in previous Galactic models, is incompatible with the asteroseismic information. We show that spectroscopic measurements of [Fe/H] and [$\alpha$/Fe] elemental abundances from the GALAH survey indicate a mean metallicity of $\log (Z/Z_{\odot})=-0.16$ for the thick disc. Here $Z$ is the effective solar-scaled metallicity, which is a function of [Fe/H] and [$\alpha$/Fe]. With the revised disc metallicities, for the first time, the theoretically predicted distribution of seismic masses show excellent agreement with the observed distribution of masses. This provides an indirect verification of the asteroseismic mass scaling relation is good to within five percent. Using an importance-sampling framework that takes the selection function into account, we fit a population synthesis model of the Galaxy to the observed seismic and spectroscopic data. Assuming the asteroseismic scaling relations are correct, we estimate the mean age of the thick disc to be about 10 Gyr, in agreement with the traditional idea of an old $\alpha$-enhanced thick disc.<br />Comment: 21 pages, submitted to MNRAS

Details

ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
490
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9ff78737cb32a82bc3af130760e2c3a0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2861