arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1410.7257 [astro-ph.GA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Chemical evolution of the bulge of M31: predictions about abundance ratios

M. M. Marcon-Uchida, F. Matteucci, G. A. Lanfranchi, E. Spitoni, V. Grieco

Published 2014-10-27Version 1

We aim at reproducing the chemical evolution of the bulge of M31 by means of a detailed chemical evolution model, including radial gas flows coming from the disk. We study the impact of the initial mass function, the star formation rate and the time scale for bulge formation on the metallicity distribution function of stars. We compute several models of chemical evolution using the metallicity distribution of dwarf stars as an observational constraint for the bulge of M31. Then, by means of the model which best reproduces the metallicity distribution function, we predict the [X/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] relations for several chemical elements (O, Mg, Si, Ca, C, N). Our best model for the bulge of M31 is obtained by means of a robust statistical method and assumes a Salpeter initial mass function, a Schmidt-Kennicutt law for star formation with an exponent k=1.5, an efficiency of star formation of $\sim 15\pm 0.27\, Gyr^{-1}$, and an infall timescale of $\sim 0.10\pm 0.03$Gyr. Our results suggest that the bulge of M31 formed very quickly by means of an intense star formation rate and an initial mass function flatter than in the solar vicinity but similar to that inferred for the Milky Way bulge. The [$\alpha$/Fe] ratios in the stars of the bulge of M31 should be high for most of the [Fe/H] range, as is observed in the Milky Way bulge. These predictions await future data to be proven.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1510.02622 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2015-10-09)
Chemical evolution of the inner 2 degrees of the Milky Way bulge: [alpha/Fe] trends and metallicity gradients
arXiv:1301.4741 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2013-01-21)
Chemical evolution in star clusters: the role of mass and environment
arXiv:1607.00015 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2016-06-30)
Self-similarity in the chemical evolution of galaxies and the delay time distribution of SNe Ia