USING CEPHEIDS TO DETERMINE THE GALACTIC ABUNDANCE GRADIENT.
I. THE SOLAR NEIGHBOURHOOD
S.M. Andrievsky, V.V. Kovtyukh, R.E. Luck, J.R.D. Lépine,
D. Bersier, W.J. Maciel, B. Barbuy, V.G. Klochkova, V.E. Panchuk,
R.U. Karpischek
Astronomy and Astrophysics 381, 32-50 (2002)
A number of studies of abundance gradients in the galactic disk have been
performed in recent years. The results obtained are rather disparate: from
no detectable gradient to a rather significant slope of about -0.1 dex kpc
-1. The present study concerns the abundance gradient based on the
spectroscopic analysis of a sample of classical Cepheids. These stars
enable one to obtain reliable abundances of a variety of chemical elements.
Additionally, they have well determined distances which allow an accurate
determination of abundance distributions in the galactic disc. Using 236
high resolution spectra of 77 galactic Cepheids, the radial elemental
distribution in the galactic disc between galactocentric distances in the
range 6-11 kpc has been investigated. Gradients for 25 chemical elements
(from carbon to gadolinium) are derived. The following results were
obtained in this study. Almost all investigated elements show rather flat
abundance distributions in the middle part of galactic disc. Typical values
for iron-group elements lie within an interval from ~ -0.02 to ~ -0.04
dex kpc -1 (in particular, for iron we obtained
d[Fe/H]/d [RG= -0.029] dex/kpc). Similar gradients were also
obtained for O, Mg, Al, Si, and Ca. For sulphur we have found a steeper
gradient ( -0.05 dex/kpc). For elements from Zr to Gd we obtained
(within the error bars) a near to zero gradient value. This result is
reported for the first time. Those elements whose abundance is not expected
to be altered during the early stellar evolution (e.g. the iron-group
elements) show at the solar galactocentric distance [El/H] values which are
essentially solar. Therefore, there is no apparent reason to consider our
Sun as a metal-rich star. The gradient values obtained in the present study
indicate that the radial abundance distribution within 6-11 kpc is quite
homogeneous, and this result favors a galactic model including a bar
structure which may induce radial flows in the disc, and thus may be
responsible for abundance homogenization.
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