Chemical enrichment in cosmological, smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations
Robert P. C. Wiersma, Joop Schaye, Tom Theuns, Claudio Dalla Vecchia,, and Luca Tornatore

TL;DR
This paper introduces a detailed chemical enrichment model in cosmological SPH simulations, tracking multiple elements and their effects on cooling, star formation, and metal distribution, highlighting issues with metallicity definitions and metal mixing.
Contribution
It presents a novel implementation of element-by-element chemical feedback and cooling in SPH simulations, addressing metal tracking and distribution complexities.
Findings
Most metals are locked in stars by z=0.
Gaseous metals span wide density and temperature ranges.
Warm-hot intergalactic medium has high metallicity (~0.1 Z_sun).
Abstract
(Abridged) We present an implementation of stellar evolution and chemical feedback for smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations. We consider the timed release of individual elements by both massive (Type II supernovae and stellar winds) and intermediate mass stars (Type Ia supernovae and asymptotic giant branch stars). We illustrate the results of our method using a suite of cosmological simulations that include new prescriptions for radiative cooling, star formation, and galactic winds. Radiative cooling is implemented element-by-element, in the presence of an ionizing radiation background, and we track all 11 elements that contribute significantly to the radiative cooling. We contrast two reasonable definitions of the metallicity of a resolution element and find that while they agree for high metallicities, there are large differences at low metallicities. We argue the…
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