Modelling the chemical evolution of the Galaxy halo
G. Brusadin, F. Matteucci, D. Romano

TL;DR
This study models the chemical evolution of the Galactic halo, demonstrating that gas infall and outflow are essential to match observed metallicity distributions, while population III stars are not necessary for explaining halo formation.
Contribution
It introduces a two-infall plus outflow model with a specific outflow rate and explores the impact of population III stars with different initial mass functions on halo evolution.
Findings
Gas infall and outflow are crucial for matching observed metallicity distributions.
Including population III stars with various IMFs worsens the fit to data.
A short infall timescale (~0.2 Gyr) is favored for halo formation.
Abstract
We study the chemical evolution and formation of the Galactic halo through the analysis of its stellar metallicity distribution function and some key elemental abundance patterns. Starting from the two-infall model for the Galaxy, which predicts too few low-metallicity stars, we add a gas outflow during the halo phase with a rate proportional to the star formation rate through a free parameter, lambda. In addition, we consider a first generation of massive zero-metal stars in this two-infall + outflow model adopting two different top-heavy initial mass functions and specific population III yields. The metallicity distribution function of halo stars, as predicted by the two-infall + outflow model shows a good agreement with observations, when the parameter lambda=14 and the time scale for the first infall, out of which the halo formed, is not longer than 0.2 Gyr, a lower value than…
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