Chemical evolution of the bulge of M31: predictions about abundance ratios
M. M. Marcon-Uchida, F. Matteucci, G. A. Lanfranchi, E. Spitoni, V., Grieco

TL;DR
This study models the chemical evolution of M31's bulge, predicting abundance ratios and star formation history, and finds it likely formed rapidly with an initial mass function similar to the Milky Way bulge.
Contribution
It presents a detailed chemical evolution model of M31's bulge, incorporating radial gas flows and observational constraints to predict element abundance ratios.
Findings
Bulge formed quickly with intense star formation.
Initial mass function flatter than in the solar vicinity.
Predicted high [$ ext{α}$/Fe] ratios across [Fe/H] range.
Abstract
We aim at reproducing the chemical evolution of the bulge of M31 by means of a detailed chemical evolution model, including radial gas flows coming from the disk. We study the impact of the initial mass function, the star formation rate and the time scale for bulge formation on the metallicity distribution function of stars. We compute several models of chemical evolution using the metallicity distribution of dwarf stars as an observational constraint for the bulge of M31. Then, by means of the model which best reproduces the metallicity distribution function, we predict the [X/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] relations for several chemical elements (O, Mg, Si, Ca, C, N). Our best model for the bulge of M31 is obtained by means of a robust statistical method and assumes a Salpeter initial mass function, a Schmidt-Kennicutt law for star formation with an exponent k=1.5, an efficiency of star formation of…
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