The milky way tomography with SDSS. II. stellar metallicity

Željko Ivezić*, Branimir Sesar, Mario Jurić, Nicholas Bond, Julianne Dalcanton, Constance M. Rockosi, Brian Yanny, Heidi J. Newberg, Timothy C. Beers, Carlos Allende Prieto, Ron Wilhelm, Young Sun Lee, Thirupathi Sivarani, John E. Norris, Coryn A.L. Bailer-Jones, Paola R.E. Fiorentin, David Schlegel, Alan Uomoto, Robert H. Lupton, Gillian R. KnappJames E. Gunn, Kevin R. Covey, J. Allyn Smith, Gajus Miknaitis, Mamoru Doi, Masayuki Tanaka, Masataka Fukugita, Steve Kent, Douglas Finkbeiner, Jeffrey A. Munn, Jeffrey R. Pier, Tom Quinn, Suzanne Hawley, Scott Anderson, Furea Kiuchi, Alex Chen, James Bushong, Harkirat Sohi, Daryl Haggard, Amy Kimball, John Barentine, Howard Brewington, Mike Harvanek, Scott Kleinman, Jurek Krzesinski, Dan Long, Atsuko Nitta, Stephanie Snedden, Brian Lee, Hugh Harris, Jonathan Brinkmann, Donald P. Schneider, Donald G. York

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    449 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Using effective temperature and metallicity derived from SDSS spectra for ∼60,000 F- and G-type main-sequence stars (0.2 < g - r < 0.6), we develop polynomial models for estimating these parameters from the SDSS u - g and g - r colors. These photometric estimates have similar error properties as those determined from SDSS spectra. We apply this method to SDSS photometric data for over 2 million F/G stars and measure the unbiased metallicity distribution for a complete volume-limited sample of stars at distances between 500 pc and 8 kpc. The metallicity distribution can be exquisitely modeled using two components with a spatially varying number ratio, which correspond to disk and halo. The two components also possess the kinematics expected for disk and halo stars. The metallicity of the halo component is spatially invariant, while the median disk metallicity smoothly decreases with distance from the Galactic plane from -0.6 at 500 pc to -0.8 beyond several kiloparsecs. The absence of a correlation between metallicity and kinematics for disk stars is in a conflict with the traditional decomposition in terms of thin and thick disks. We detect coherent substructures in the kinematics-metallicity space, such as the Monoceros stream, which rotates faster than the LSR, and has a median metallicity of [Fe/H] = -0.95, with an rms scatter of only ∼0.15 dex. We extrapolate our results to the performance expected from the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) and estimate that LSST will obtain metallicity measurements accurate to 0.2 dex or better, with proper-motion measurements accurate to ∼0.5 mas yr-1, for about 200 million F/G dwarf stars within a distance limit of ∼100 kpc (g < 23.5).

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)287-325
    Number of pages39
    JournalAstrophysical Journal
    Volume684
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2008

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