The Origin and Evolution of the Galaxy Mass-Metallicity Relation
Xiangcheng Ma (1), Philip F. Hopkins (1), Claude-Andre Faucher-Giguere, (2), Nick Zolman (1), Alexander L. Muratov (3), Dusan Keres (3), Eliot, Quataert (4) ((1) Caltech, (2) Northwestern, (3) UCSD, (4) UC Berkeley)

TL;DR
This study uses advanced cosmological simulations to explore the evolution of the galaxy mass-metallicity relation from redshift 0 to 6, aligning well with observations and revealing a universal relation involving stellar and gas metallicities.
Contribution
First simulations to accurately reproduce the observed MZR evolution from z=0-3 across a broad galaxy mass range, linking metallicity evolution to stellar and gas mass fractions.
Findings
Simulations agree with observed MZR at z=0-3 for various galaxy masses.
Predicted evolution of gas-phase and stellar metallicities from z=0-6.
Galaxies above 10^6 Msun retain most metals, resolving previous model discrepancies.
Abstract
We use high-resolution cosmological zoom-in simulations from the Feedback in Realistic Environment (FIRE) project to study the galaxy mass-metallicity relations (MZR) from z=0-6. These simulations include explicit models of the multi-phase ISM, star formation, and stellar feedback. The simulations cover halo masses Mhalo=10^9-10^13 Msun and stellar mass Mstar=10^4-10^11 Msun at z=0 and have been shown to produce many observed galaxy properties from z=0-6. For the first time, our simulations agree reasonably well with the observed mass-metallicity relations at z=0-3 for a broad range of galaxy masses. We predict the evolution of the MZR from z=0-6 as log(Zgas/Zsun)=12+log(O/H)-9.0=0.35[log(Mstar/Msun)-10]+0.93 exp(-0.43 z)-1.05 and log(Zstar/Zsun)=[Fe/H]-0.2=0.40[log(Mstar/Msun)-10]+0.67 exp(-0.50 z)-1.04, for gas-phase and stellar metallicity, respectively. Our simulations suggest that…
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