The star formation history and chemical evolution of star forming galaxies in the nearby universe
J. P. Torres-Papaqui, R. Coziol, R. A. Ortega-Minakata, D. M., Neri-Larios

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical and star formation histories of over 120,000 nearby star-forming galaxies, revealing links between nitrogen excess, galaxy mass, morphology, and starburst activity, and proposing a wind-driven chemical evolution model.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of chemical abundances and star formation histories in a large galaxy sample, highlighting the role of starburst winds and galaxy mass in chemical evolution.
Findings
45% of galaxies show nitrogen excess relative to metallicity.
Nitrogen-rich galaxies tend to be more massive with earlier morphologies.
Evidence supports starburst winds influencing chemical evolution during galaxy formation.
Abstract
We have determined the O/H and N/O of a sample of 122751 SFGs from the DR7 of the SDSS. For all these galaxies we have also determined their morphology and their SFH using the code STARLIGHT. The comparison of the chemical abundance with the SFH allows us to describe the chemical evolution in the nearby universe (z < 0.25) in a manner which is consistent with the formation of their stellar populations and morphologies. A 45% of the SFGs in our sample show an excess of abundance in nitrogen relative to their metallicity. We also find this excess to be accompanied by a deficiency of oxygen, which suggests that this could be the result of effective starburst winds. However, we find no difference in the mode of star formation of the nitrogen rich and nitrogen poor SFGs. Our analysis suggests they all form their stars through a succession of bursts of star formation extended over a few Gyr…
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