The Distribution of Metals in Cosmological Hydrodynamical Simulations of Dwarf Disk Galaxies
K. Pilkington, B. K. Gibson, C. B. Brook, F. Calura, G. S. Stinson, R., J. Thacker, L. Michel-Dansac, J. Bailin, H. M. P. Couchman, J. Wadsley, T. R., Quinn, A. Maccio

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical properties of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of dwarf disk galaxies, focusing on metallicity distributions and the effects of different baryonic physics prescriptions, to compare with observed stellar metallicity data.
Contribution
It investigates how various baryonic physics parameters influence metallicity distributions in dwarf galaxy simulations, highlighting the role of metal diffusion and feedback processes.
Findings
Simulated MDFs are more negatively skewed than observed.
Steeper age-metallicity relations may exist in dwarf discs.
Metal diffusion reduces the number of extremely metal-poor stars.
Abstract
We examine the chemical properties of 5 cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of an M33-like disc galaxy which have been shown to be consistent with the morphological characteristics and bulk scaling relations expected of late-type spirals. These simulations are part of the Making Galaxies In a Cosmological Context (MaGICC) Project, in which stellar feedback is tuned to match the stellar mass -- halo mass relationship. Each realisation employed identical initial conditions and assembly histories, but differed from one another in their underlying baryonic physics prescriptions, including (a) the efficiency with which each supernova energy couples to the ISM, (b) the impact of feedback associated with massive star radiation pressure, (c) the role of the minimum shut-off time for radiative cooling of Type II SNe remnants, (d) the treatment of metal diffusion, and (e) varying the IMF. Our…
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