Bibcode
Rockosi, C. M.; Beers, T. C.; Allende-Prieto, C.; Wilhelm, R.; Munn, J. A.
Referencia bibliográfica
American Astronomical Society Meeting 205, #142.10; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 36, p.1582
Fecha de publicación:
12
2004
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
The old stellar populations of the Milky Way carry the signature of
their formation environment and dynamical history in their kinematics
and chemical abundances. In particular, the dynamically hot thick disk
and halo contain the oldest stars in the Galaxy, and are remnants of its
more chaotic past. We present a study of the high-latitude thick disk
and halo based on a uniformly-selected sample of over 3000 stars with
available medium-resolution (2.3 Å) stellar spectra and ugriz
photometry from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The stars occupy the
main-sequence turnoff region of old populations and are selected without
any kinematic or metallicity criteria, hence they provide an unbiased
sample of the underlying stellar populations. This is the first
one-third of a sample that will soon include on the order of 10,000 such
stars.
We use radial velocities, proper motions, and estimates of [Fe/H],
Teff, and log g to examine the rotation velocity, chemical
abundance patterns, and velocity dispersions as a function of distance
and position in the Galaxy. Based on these data, we examine the
properties of the thick disk as a function of height above the Galactic
plane and obtain a new estimate of the relative normalization of the
thick disk and halo populations in the Galaxy.
This work received partial funding support from grant NASA grant
HST-HF-01143.01-A and PHY 02-16783, Physics Frontier Centers/JINA: Joint
Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics, awarded by the US National Science
Foundation.