The observed chemical diversity of Milky Way stars places important
constraints on Galactic chemical evolution and the mixing processes that
operate within the interstellar medium. Recent works have found that the
chemical diversity of disk stars is low. For example, the APOGEE "chemical
doppelganger rate," or the rate at which random pairs of field stars appear as
chemically similar as stars born together, is high, and the chemical
distributions of APOGEE stars in some Galactic populations are well-described
by two-dimensional models. However, limited attention has been paid to the
heavy elements (Z > 30) in this context. In this work, we probe the potential
for neutron-capture elements to enhance the chemical diversity of stars by
determining their effect on the chemical doppelganger rate. We measure the
doppelganger rate in GALAH DR3, with abundances rederived using The Cannon, and
find that considering the neutron-capture elements decreases the doppelganger
rate from 2.2% to 0.4%, nearly a factor of 6, for stars with -0.1 < [Fe/H] <
0.1. While chemical similarity correlates with similarity in age and dynamics,
including neutron-capture elements does not appear to select stars that are
more similar in these characteristics. Our results highlight that the
neutron-capture elements contain information that is distinct from that of the
lighter elements and thus add at least one dimension to Milky Way abundance
space. This work illustrates the importance of considering the neutron-capture
elements when chemically characterizing stars and motivates ongoing work to
improve their atomic data and measurements in spectroscopic surveys.Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures, 1 table. Submitted to AAS Journals, comments
welcome. Associated catalog of high precision, Cannon-rederived abundances
for GALAH giants to be made publicly available upon acceptance and available
now upon request. See Walsen et al. 2023 for a complementary, high precision,
Cannon-rederived abundance catalog for GALAH solar twin