Chemical evolution during gas-rich galaxy interactions
Josefa Perez, Leo Michel-Dansac, Patricia Tissera

TL;DR
This study uses chemo-hydrodynamical simulations to explore how gas-rich galaxy interactions influence chemical evolution, metallicity gradients, and star formation, revealing complex inflow and feedback processes affecting galaxy metallicity.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the chemical evolution during galaxy interactions by including detailed feedback, star formation, and varying gas fractions in simulations.
Findings
Tidally-induced inflows dilute central metallicity and flatten gradients.
Higher gas fractions lead to larger metallicity dilutions and more vigorous star formation.
Metallicity and star formation correlate with interaction strength.
Abstract
We analyse a set of galaxy interactions performed by using a self-consistent chemo-hydrodynamical model which includes star formation, Supernova feedback and chemical evolution. In agreement with previous works, we find that tidally-induced low-metallicity gas inflows dilute the central oxygen abundance and contribute to the flattening of the metallicity gradients. The tidally-induced inflows trigger starbursts which increase the impact of SN II feedback injecting new chemical elements and driving galactic winds which modulate the metallicity distribution. Although -enhancement in the central regions is detected as a result of the induced starbursts in agreement with previous works, our simulations suggest that this parameter can only provide a timing of the first pericentre mainly for non-retrograde encounters. In order to reproduce wet major mergers at low and high redshifts,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
