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Mapping the Galactic disk with the LAMOST and $Gaia$ Red clump sample: V: On the origin of the 'young' [$\alpha$/Fe]-enhanced stars

Authors :
Dongfei Jiang
Ming Zhang
Bin Chen
H. F. Wang
Xiang-Kun Liu
D. D. Wei
Wei-Xiang Sun
H. W. Zhang
X. Y. Li
Yu Huang
Chi Wang
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Using a sample of nearly 140,000 primary red clump stars selected from the LAMOST and $Gaia$ surveys, we have identified a large sample of "young" [$\alpha$/Fe]-enhanced stars with stellar ages younger than 6.0 Gyr and [$\alpha$/Fe] ratios greater than 0.15 dex. The stellar ages and [$\alpha$/Fe] ratios are measured from LAMOST spectra, using a machine learning method trained with common stars in the LAMOST-APOGEE fields (for [$\alpha$/Fe]) and in the LAMOST-$Kepler$ fields (for stellar age). The existence of these "young" [$\alpha$/Fe]-enhanced stars is not expected from the classical Galactic chemical evolution models. To explore their possible origins, we have analyzed the spatial distribution, and the chemical and kinematic properties of those stars and compared the results with those of the chemically thin and thick disk populations. We find that those "young" [$\alpha$/Fe]-enhanced stars have distributions in number density, metallicity, [C/N] abundance ratio, velocity dispersion and orbital eccentricity that are essentially the same as those of the chemically thick disk population. Our results clearly show those so-called "young" [$\alpha$/Fe]-enhanced stars are not really young but $genuinely$ $old$. Although other alternative explanations can not be fully ruled out, our results suggest that the most possible origin of these old stars is the result of stellar mergers or mass transfer.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e77c62d6c71fb069bff40b57805df258