Galactic chemical evolution in hierarchical formation models - I. Early-type galaxies in the local Universe
Mat\'ias Arrigoni (1), Scott C. Trager (1), Rachel S. Somerville (2,3), and Brad K. Gibson (4) ((1) Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, (2) Space, Telescope Science Institute, (3) Johns Hopkins University, (4) University of, Central Lancashire)

TL;DR
This paper integrates a detailed chemical evolution model into semi-analytic galaxy formation simulations, successfully reproducing observed metallicity and abundance ratio relations in early-type galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces the first semi-analytic model with AGN feedback that relaxes the instantaneous recycling approximation and matches key observational relations.
Findings
Reproduces the observed mass-metallicity relation.
Successfully models the positive slope of the mass-abundance ratio relation.
Aligns supernova rates with observations in early-type galaxies.
Abstract
We study the metallicities and abundance ratios of early-type galaxies in cosmological semi-analytic models (SAMs) within the hierarchical galaxy formation paradigm. To achieve this we implemented a detailed galactic chemical evolution (GCE) model and can now predict abundances of individual elements for the galaxies in the semi-analytic simulations. This is the first time a SAM with feedback from Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) has included a chemical evolution prescription that relaxes the instantaneous recycling approximation. We find that the new models are able to reproduce the observed mass-metallicity (M*-[Z/H]) relation and, for the first time in a SAM, we reproduce the observed positive slope of the mass-abundance ratio (M*-[/Fe]) relation. Our results indicate that in order to simultaneously match these observations of early-type galaxies, the use of both a very mildly…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
