Beraldo e Silva, LeandroDebattista, Victor P.Nidever, DavidAmarante, João A SGarver, Bethany2022-08-302022-08-302020-12Beraldo e Silva, L., Debattista, V. P., Nidever, D., Amarante, J. A., & Garver, B. (2021). Co-formation of the thin and thick discs revealed by APOGEE-DR16 and Gaia-DR2. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 502(1), 260-272.0035-8711https://scholarworks.montana.edu/handle/1/17031This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2020 Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Since thin disc stars are younger than thick disc stars on average, the thin disc is predicted by some models to start forming after the thick disc had formed, around 10 Gyr ago. Accordingly, no significant old thin disc population should exist. Using 6D coordinates from Gaia-DR2 and age estimates from Sanders & Das, we select ∼24 000 old stars (${\tau \gt 10\mbox{$\, \mathrm{Gyr}$}}$, with uncertainties $\lesssim 15$) within $2\mbox{$\, \mathrm{kpc}$}$ from the Sun (full sample). A cross-match with APOGEE-DR16 (∼1000 stars) reveals comparable fractions of old chemically defined thin/thick disc stars. We show that the full sample pericentre radius (rper) distribution has three peaks, one associated with the stellar halo and the other two having contributions from the thin/thick discs. Using a high-resolution N-body + SPH simulation, we demonstrate that one peak, at $\mbox{$r_\mathrm{per}$}\approx 7.1\mbox{$\, \mathrm{kpc}$}$, is produced by stars from both discs that were born in the inner Galaxy and migrated to the Solar Neighbourhood. In the Solar Neighbourhood, ∼1/2 (∼1/3) of the old thin (thick) disc stars are classified as migrators. Our results suggest that thin/thick discs are affected differently by radial migration inasmuch as they have different eccentricity distributions, regardless of vertical scale heights. We interpret the existence of a significant old thin disc population as evidence for an early co-formation of thin/thick discs, arguing that clump instabilities in the early disc offer a compelling explanation for the observed trends.en-UScopyrights oxford 2021https://web.archive.org/web/20220310101528/https://academic.oup.com/journals/pages/self_archiving_policy_papogee dr16Co-formation of the thin and thick discs revealed by APOGEE-DR16 and Gaia-DR2Article