The dilution peak, metallicity evolution, and dating of galaxy interactions and mergers
M. Montuori, P. Di Matteo, M. D. Lehnert, F. Combes, B. Semelin

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy interactions induce gas inflows that dilute metallicity, trigger star formation, and can be used to date the stages of mergers through chemical signatures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of metallicity dilution, star formation, and chemical enrichment during galaxy mergers, introducing a method to date interactions using alpha/Fe ratios.
Findings
Gas inflows cause metallicity dilution within 10^8 years.
Star formation peaks after the first pericentre, reducing metallicity.
Chemical enrichment eventually increases metallicity beyond initial levels.
Abstract
Strong inflows of gas from the outer disk to the inner kiloparsecs are induced during the interaction of disk galaxies. This inflow of relatively low-metallicity gas dilutes the metallicity of the circumnuclear gas. We have investigated several aspects of the process as the timing and duration of the dilution and its correlation with the induced star formation. We analysed major (1:1) gas-rich interactions and mergers, spanning a range of initial orbital characteristics. Star formation and metal enrichment from SNe are included in our model. Our results show that the strongest trend is between the star formation rate and the dilution of the metals in the nuclear region; i.e., the more intense the central burst of star formation, the more the gas is diluted. This trend comes from strong inflows of relatively metal-poor gas from the outer regions of both disks, which fuels the intense…
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