Theory of Stellar Population Synthesis with an application to N-Body simulations
S. Pasetto, C. Chiosi, D. Kawata

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new theoretical method for stellar population synthesis that efficiently predicts color-magnitude diagrams for large stellar systems in N-body galaxy simulations, regardless of the simulation's resolution.
Contribution
The method extends simple stellar population models to include phase-space data and uses a comprehensive SSP database, enabling accurate CMD predictions for diverse stellar systems.
Findings
Successfully applied to a disc galaxy N-body simulation
Generates CMDs independent of simulation mass resolution
Flexible for various galaxy types and stellar systems
Abstract
Aims. We present here a new theoretical approach to population synthesis. The aim is to predict colour magnitude diagrams (CMDs) for huge numbers of stars. With this method we generate synthetic CMDs for N-body simulations of galaxies. Sophisticated hydrodynamic N-body models of galaxies require equal quality simulations of the photometric properties of their stellar content. The only prerequisite for the method to work is very little information on the star formation and chemical enrichment histories, i.e. the age and metallicity of all star-particles as a function of time. The method takes into account the gap between the mass of real stars and that of the star-particles in N-body simulations, which best correspond to the mass of star clusters with different age and metallicity, i.e. a manifold of single stellar sopulations (SSP). Methods. The theory extends the concept of SSP to…
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