Reprojects abundances of 199k stars into 4 patterns, identifying enrichment pathways with strong chemo-spatial, age, and vertical correlations plus a transition at ~6 Gyr.
Title resolution pending
5 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
representative citing papers
A revised steady-state radial-velocity response model with both V_R,sin and V_R,cos terms constrains the Milky Way's two-armed spiral to a pitch angle of ~10° and local density contrast of 5-18% at the solar radius.
A public catalogue provides geometric and photogeometric distances plus uncertainties for 1.47 billion Gaia EDR3 stars derived via probabilistic inference with a three-dimensional Galactic prior.
Three accelerating stars yield one stellar companion at 166 AU, one 45 Jupiter-mass object at ~18 AU, and one 9.5 Jupiter-mass object at 6.4 AU that is 65% likely to be a planet.
A two-wave radial corrugation model fitted to LAMOST and Gaia data reproduces the observed periodic radial velocity variations and explains the inner-outer disk transition in the Milky Way.
citing papers explorer
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Milky Way Mapper decoded abundances -- II: From patterns to paths
Reprojects abundances of 199k stars into 4 patterns, identifying enrichment pathways with strong chemo-spatial, age, and vertical correlations plus a transition at ~6 Gyr.
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Tracing the kinematic perturbations of the Milky Way spiral arms with APOGEE DR17 and Gaia DR3
A revised steady-state radial-velocity response model with both V_R,sin and V_R,cos terms constrains the Milky Way's two-armed spiral to a pitch angle of ~10° and local density contrast of 5-18% at the solar radius.
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Estimating distances from parallaxes. V: Geometric and photogeometric distances to 1.47 billion stars in Gaia Early Data Release 3
A public catalogue provides geometric and photogeometric distances plus uncertainties for 1.47 billion Gaia EDR3 stars derived via probabilistic inference with a three-dimensional Galactic prior.
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Gaia Exoplanet Orbits, Demographics, and Evolution Survey (GEODES): Characteristics of Three Long-Period Companions Accelerating their Host Stars
Three accelerating stars yield one stellar companion at 166 AU, one 45 Jupiter-mass object at ~18 AU, and one 9.5 Jupiter-mass object at 6.4 AU that is 65% likely to be a planet.
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The multiple corrugations in the Galactic disk derived from the LAMOST and Gaia survey data
A two-wave radial corrugation model fitted to LAMOST and Gaia data reproduces the observed periodic radial velocity variations and explains the inner-outer disk transition in the Milky Way.