The metal contents of two groups of galaxies
Y. G. Grange (1), J. de Plaa (1), J. S. Kaastra (1, 2), N. Werner, (3), F. Verbunt (2, 1), F. Paerels (4), C. P. de Vries (1) ((1) SRON,, (2) Utrecht University, (3) KIPAC/Stanford, (4) Columbia University)

TL;DR
This study measures metal abundances in galaxy groups NGC 5044 and NGC 5813 using X-ray spectroscopy, revealing insights into the origins of nitrogen and carbon, and suggesting low- to intermediate-mass stars as their primary sources.
Contribution
It provides detailed abundance ratios of carbon and nitrogen in galaxy group gas, challenging the idea that massive stars are the main sources of these elements.
Findings
High C/O and N/O ratios compared to Galactic stars
Oxygen and nitrogen abundances similar to other ellipticals
Nitrogen and carbon likely originate from low- and intermediate-mass stars
Abstract
The hot gas in clusters and groups of galaxies is continuously being enriched with metals from supernovae and stars. It is well established that the enrichment of the gas with elements from oxygen to iron is mainly caused by supernova explosions. The origins of nitrogen and carbon are still being debated. Possible candidates include massive, metal-rich stars, early generations of massive stars, intermediate or low mass stars and Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars. In this paper we accurately determine the metal abundances of the gas in the groups of galaxies NGC 5044 and NGC 5813, and discuss the nature of the objects that create these metals. We mainly focus on carbon and nitrogen. We use spatially-resolved high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy from XMM-Newton. For the spectral fitting, multi-temperature hot gas models are used. The abundance ratios of carbon over oxygen and nitrogen…
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