Oxygen abundance in local disk and bulge: chemical evolution with a strictly universal IMF
R. Caimmi, E. Milanese

TL;DR
This study investigates oxygen abundance distributions in the Milky Way's disk and bulge, demonstrating that a universal initial mass function can explain observed chemical evolution patterns across different galactic regions.
Contribution
It introduces models with a strictly universal IMF that successfully reproduce oxygen abundance data in various galactic components, challenging previous assumptions about variable star formation efficiencies.
Findings
Universal IMF models fit observed data well.
Chemical evolution varies with environment but follows a universal IMF.
Existence of undetected low-oxygen stars influences abundance distributions.
Abstract
The empirical differential oxygen abundance distribution (EDOD) is deduced from subsamples related to two different samples involving solar neighbourhood (SN) thick disk, thin disk, halo, and bulge stars. The EDOD of the SN thick + thin disk is determined by weighting the mass, for assumed SN thick to thin disk mass ratio within the range, 0.1-0.9. Inhomogeneous models of chemical evolution for the SN thick disk, the SN thin disk, the SN thick + thin disk, the SN halo, and the bulge, are computed assuming the instantaneous recycling approximation. The EDOD data are fitted, to an acceptable extent, by their TDOD counterparts provided (i) still undetected, low-oxygen abundance thin disk stars exist, and (ii) a single oxygen overabundant star is removed from a thin disk subsample. In any case, the (assumed power-law) stellar initial mass function (IMF) is universal but gas can be inhibited…
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