TY - JOUR
T1 - He abundances in disc galaxies. I. Predictions from cosmological chemodynamical simulations
AU - Vincenzo, Fiorenzo
AU - Miglio, Andrea
AU - Kobayashi, Chiaki
AU - Mackereth, J. Ted
AU - Montalban, Josefina
N1 - Accepted for publication in A&A
PY - 2019/10/1
Y1 - 2019/10/1
N2 - We investigate how the stellar and gas-phase He abundances evolve as a function of time within simulated star-forming disc galaxies with different star formation histories. We make use of a cosmological chemodynamical simulation for galaxy formation and evolution, which includes star formation as well as energy and chemical enrichment feedback from asymptotic giant branch stars, core-collapse supernovae, and Type Ia supernovae. The predicted relations between the He mass fraction, Y, and the metallicity, Z, in the interstellar medium of our simulated disc galaxies depend on the galaxy star formation history. In particular, dY/dZ is not constant and evolves as a function of time, depending on the specific chemical element that we choose to trace Z; in particular, dY/dX
O and dY/dX
C increase as a function of time, whereas dY/dX
N decreases. In the gas-phase, we find negative radial gradients of Y, due to the inside-out growth of our simulated galaxy discs as a function of time; this gives rise to longer chemical enrichment timescales in the outer galaxy regions, where we find lower average values for Y and Z. Finally, by means of chemical-evolution models, in the galactic bulge and inner disc, we predict steeper Y vs. age relations at high Z than in the outer galaxy regions. We conclude that for calibrating the assumed Y-Z relation in stellar models, C, N, and C+N are better proxies for the metallicity than O because they show steeper and less scattered relations.
AB - We investigate how the stellar and gas-phase He abundances evolve as a function of time within simulated star-forming disc galaxies with different star formation histories. We make use of a cosmological chemodynamical simulation for galaxy formation and evolution, which includes star formation as well as energy and chemical enrichment feedback from asymptotic giant branch stars, core-collapse supernovae, and Type Ia supernovae. The predicted relations between the He mass fraction, Y, and the metallicity, Z, in the interstellar medium of our simulated disc galaxies depend on the galaxy star formation history. In particular, dY/dZ is not constant and evolves as a function of time, depending on the specific chemical element that we choose to trace Z; in particular, dY/dX
O and dY/dX
C increase as a function of time, whereas dY/dX
N decreases. In the gas-phase, we find negative radial gradients of Y, due to the inside-out growth of our simulated galaxy discs as a function of time; this gives rise to longer chemical enrichment timescales in the outer galaxy regions, where we find lower average values for Y and Z. Finally, by means of chemical-evolution models, in the galactic bulge and inner disc, we predict steeper Y vs. age relations at high Z than in the outer galaxy regions. We conclude that for calibrating the assumed Y-Z relation in stellar models, C, N, and C+N are better proxies for the metallicity than O because they show steeper and less scattered relations.
KW - astro-ph.GA
KW - Galaxies: evolution
KW - Stars: abundances
KW - ISM: abundances
KW - Galaxies: abundances
KW - Hydrodynamics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85073233251&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1051/0004-6361/201935886
DO - 10.1051/0004-6361/201935886
M3 - Article
SN - 0004-6361
VL - 630
JO - Astronomy & Astrophysics
JF - Astronomy & Astrophysics
M1 - A125
ER -