The effects of stellar winds of fast-rotating massive stars in the earliest phases of the chemical enrichment of the Galaxy
Gabriele Cescutti, Cristina Chiappini

TL;DR
This study models how stellar winds from fast-rotating massive stars influenced early Galactic chemical enrichment, explaining observed element ratios and the origins of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars.
Contribution
It introduces a new inhomogeneous chemical evolution model considering stellar wind-only enrichment for the earliest stars, explaining observed abundance spreads.
Findings
Larger scatter in C/O and N/O ratios at low metallicities due to wind-only enrichment.
Stochastic star formation explains the wide abundance spread in very-metal-poor stars.
Stellar winds alone cannot account for the extreme CNO enhancements in some metal-poor stars.
Abstract
We use the growing data sets of very-metal-poor stars to study the impact of stellar winds of fast rotating massive stars on the chemical enrichment of the early Galaxy. We use an inhomogeneous chemical evolution model for the Galactic halo to predict both the mean trend and scatter of C/O and N/O. In one set of models, we assume that massive stars enrich the interstellar medium during both the stellar wind and supernovae phases. In the second set, we consider that in the earliest phases (Z <10^-8), stars with masses above 40 Msun only enrich the interstellar medium via stellar winds, collapsing directly into black holes. We predict a larger scatter in the C/O and N/O ratios at low metallicities when allowing the more massive fast-rotating stars to contribute to the chemical enrichment only via stellar winds. The latter assumption, combined with the stochasticity in the star formation…
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