Chemical signatures of formation processes in the stellar populations of simulated galaxies
Patricia B. Tissera (1), Simon D.M. White (2), Cecilia Scannapieco, (3) ((1) IAFE, Conicet-UBA, Argentina, (2) MPA, Garching, Germany, (3) AIP,, Postdam, Germany)

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how different formation processes influence the chemical signatures of stellar populations in Milky Way-like galaxies, revealing correlations between formation history and chemical abundance patterns.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into the chemical properties of simulated galaxy components, highlighting differences between in situ and accreted stars and their formation histories.
Findings
Discs have younger, in situ stars with low alpha-enhancement.
Inner spheroids are old, metal-rich, and mostly formed in situ.
Outer haloes are mainly composed of accreted, metal-poor, alpha-enhanced stars.
Abstract
We study the chemical properties of the stellar populations in eight simulations of the formation of Milky-Way mass galaxies in a LCDM Universe. Our simulations include metal-dependent cooling and an explicitly multiphase treatment of the effects on the gas of cooling, enrichment and supernova feedback. We search for correlations between formation history and chemical abundance patterns. Differing contributions to spheroids and discs from in situ star formation and from accreted populations are reflected in differing chemical properties. Discs have younger stellar populations, with most stars forming in situ and with low alpha-enhancement from gas which never participated in a galactic outflow. Up to 15 per cent of disc stars can come from accreted satellites. These tend to be alpha-enhanced, older and to have larger velocity dispersions than the in situ population. Inner spheroids have…
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