Prospects for chemically tagging stars in the Galaxy

 Title: Prospects for chemically tagging stars in the Galaxy 

 Speaker: Yuan-Sen Ting (丁源森), Harvard University 

 Date & Time: Dec. 28 (Monday), 2pm 

 Venue: The middle conference room 

 Abstract: 

It is now well-established that the elemental abundance patterns of stars hold key clues not only to their formation but also to the assembly histories of galaxies. One of the most exciting possibilities is the use of stellar abundance patterns as "chemical tags" to identify stars that were born in the same molecular cloud. We find that different cluster mass functions imprint different degrees of clumpiness in chemical space. These differences provide the opportunity to statistically reconstruct the slope and high mass cutoff of CMF and its evolution through cosmic time. By studying the APOGEE data set, we show that the Galactic disk is unlikely to have formed clusters more massive than 3x10^7 Msun at any point in its history and put a first abundance-based constraint on the cluster mass function for the old disk stars in the Milky Way. 


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