The Connection between Star Formation and Metallicity Evolution in Barred Spiral Galaxies
Hugo Martel, Daisuke Kawata, and Sara L. Ellison

TL;DR
This study uses chemodynamical simulations to show that metallicity enrichment in barred galaxy centers mainly results from gas inflow and star formation along the bar, not just local star formation.
Contribution
It reveals that central metallicity increases are driven by gas inflow from the bar and extended star formation, challenging the idea of in-situ enrichment as the primary cause.
Findings
Central metallicity increases due to inflow of metal-rich gas.
Star formation along the bar significantly contributes to central metallicity.
No direct correlation between central SFR and metallicity was found.
Abstract
We have performed a series of chemodynamical simulations of barred disc galaxies. Our goal is to determine the physical processes responsible for the increase in the central gas-phase metallicity and of the central SFR observed in SDSS. We define a 2kpc diameter central aperture to approximate the integrated spectroscopic fibre measurements from the SDSS. The chemical evolution observed within this central region depends critically upon the relative size of the bar and the aperture, which evolves strongly with time. At t~0.5Gyr, a strong bar forms, whose length is considerably longer than the 2kpc aperture. The stars and gas lose angular momentum and follow elongated orbits that cause an intense mixing of the gas between the central region and its surroundings. During the next 1.5Gyr, the orbits of the gas contract significantly until the entire gas bar is contained in the 2kpc…
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