CHEMICAL ENRICHMENT AND STAR FORMATION IN THE MILKY WAY DISK II.
STAR FORMATION HISTORY
H. J. Rocha-Pinto, J. Scalo, W. J. Maciel, C. Flynn
Astronomy and Astrophysics 358, 869-885 (2000)
A chromospheric age distribution of 552 late-type dwarfs is
transformed into a star formation history by the application
of scale height corrections, stellar evolutionary corrections
and volume corrections. We show that the disk of our Galaxy
has experienced enhanced episodes of star formation at
0-1 Gyr, 2-5 Gyr and 7-9 Gyr ago, although the reality
of the latter burst is still uncertain. The star sample
birthsites are distributed over a very large range of
distances because of orbital diffusion, and so give an
estimate of the global star formation rate. These results
are compared with the metal-enrichment rate, given by
the age-metallicity relation, with the expected epochs
of close encounters between our Galaxy and the Magellanic
Clouds, and with previous determinations of the star formation
history. Simulations are used to examine the age-dependent
smearing of the star formation history due to age uncertainties,
and the broadening of the recovered features, as well as
to measure the probability level that the history derived
to be produced by statistical fluctuations of a constant
star formation history.
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