The Origin and Evolution of the Mass-Metallicity Relation using GalICS
Jeremy Sakstein, Antonio Pipino, Julien Devriendt, Roberto Maiolino

TL;DR
This study uses the GalICS semi-analytical model to explore how star formation and outflows influence the evolution of the mass-metallicity relation across different redshifts, emphasizing the role of SFR in shaping the relation.
Contribution
It introduces detailed chemical evolution modeling in GalICS and demonstrates the dominant influence of star formation rate on the mass-metallicity relation over cosmic time.
Findings
SFR significantly impacts the relation at all redshifts.
A strong redshift dependence of SFR (∝ 1+z) is needed to match observations.
Outflows mainly affect the relation at later times.
Abstract
The GalICS (Galaxies in Cosmological Simulations) semi-analytical model of hierar- chical galaxy formation is used to investigate the effects of different galactic properties, including star formation rate (SFR) and outflows, on the shape of the mass metallic- ity relation and to predict the relation for galaxies at redshift z=2.27 and z=3.54. Our version of GalICS has the chemical evolution implemented in great detail and is less heavily reliant on approximations such as instantaneous recycling. We vary the model parameters controlling both the efficiency and redshift dependence of the SFR as well as the efficiency of supernova feedback. We find that the factors controlling the SFR influence the relation significantly at all redshifts and require a strong redshift dependence, proportional to 1+z, in order to reproduce the observed relation at the low mass end. Indeed, at any redshift,…
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