Stellar mass-loss, rotation and the chemical enrichment of early type galaxies
Antonio Pipino (USC), Cristina Chiappini (Geneve/INAF-Trieste),, Genevieve Graves (UCSC), Francesca Matteucci (Dip. Astronomia, Univ., Trieste)

TL;DR
This study compares observed element abundance relations in early type galaxies with chemical evolution models, highlighting successes and limitations in reproducing Ca, C, and N abundances through stellar yields and supernova contributions.
Contribution
It introduces improved stellar yields considering mass loss and rotation, and evaluates their effectiveness in modeling galaxy chemical enrichment.
Findings
The [Ca/Fe]-mass relation is explained without extra assumptions.
New stellar yields improve C and N abundance predictions.
Discrepancies remain in N predictions, suggesting uncertainties in abundance measurements.
Abstract
We present a comparison between the [Ca,C,N/Fe]-mass relations observed in local spheroids and the results of a chemical evolution model which already successfully reproduces the [Mg/Fe]-mass and the [Fe/H]-mass relations in these systems. We find that the [Ca/Fe]-mass relation is naturally explained by such a model without any additional assumption. In particular, the observed under-abundance of Ca with respect to Mg can be attributed to the different contributions from supernovae Type Ia and supernovae Type II to the nucleosynthesis of these two elements. For C and N, we consider new stellar yields that take into account stellar mass loss and rotation. These yields have been shown to successfully reproduce the C and N abundances in Milky Way metal-poor stars. The use of these new stellar yields produces a good agreement between the chemical evolution model predictions and the…
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