Galaxy Evolution in Cosmological Simulations with Outflows II: Metallicities and Gas Fractions
Romeel Dav\'e (Arizona), Kristian Finlator (UCSB), Benjamin D., Oppenheimer (Leiden)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how inflows, star formation, and outflows regulate galaxy metallicities and gas fractions, revealing equilibrium processes and their evolution from redshift 3 to 0.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical equilibrium framework linking inflows, outflows, and star formation to galaxy metallicities and gas content, validated by cosmological simulations.
Findings
Metallicity is governed by inflow-outflow balance and varies with stellar mass.
Gas fractions decrease over time due to diminishing inflow rates.
Momentum-driven winds better match observed evolution than constant wind models.
Abstract
We use cosmological hydrodynamic simulations to investigate how inflows, star formation, and outflows govern the the gaseous and metal content of galaxies. In our simulations, galaxy metallicities are established by a balance between inflows and outflows as governed by the mass outflow rate, implying that the mass-metallicity relation reflects how the outflow rate varies with stellar mass (M*). Gas content is set by a competition between inflow into and gas consumption within the ISM, the latter being governed by the SF law, while the former is impacted by both wind recycling and preventive feedback. Stochastic variations in the inflow rate move galaxies off the equilibrium M*-Z and Z*-fgas relations in a manner correlated with star formation rate, and the scatter is set by the timescale to re-equilibrate. The evolution of both relations from z=3-0 is slow, as individual galaxies tend…
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