Central enhancement of the nitrogen-to-oxygen abundance ratio in barred galaxies
E. Florido, A. Zurita, I. Perez, E. Perez-Montero, P.R.T. Coelho, D.A., Gadotti

TL;DR
This study shows that barred galaxies have higher central N/O ratios and altered gas properties compared to unbarred galaxies, indicating bars influence galaxy evolution and chemical enrichment.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that galactic bars enhance the nitrogen-to-oxygen ratio in galaxy centers, revealing their role in chemical and physical evolution.
Findings
Barred galaxies show higher central N/O ratios than unbarred galaxies.
Central gas properties differ between barred and unbarred galaxies, especially in later types.
The bar's impact is less significant in galaxies with more massive bulges or higher stellar mass.
Abstract
Bar-induced gas inflows towards the galaxy centres are recognized as a key agent for the secular evolution of galaxies. One immediate consequence is the accumulation of gas in the centre of galaxies where it can form stars and alter the chemical and physical properties. We use a sample of nearby face--on disc galaxies with available SDSS spectra to study whether the properties of the ionised gas in the central parts (radii <~0.6-2.1 kpc) of barred galaxies are altered by the presence of a bar, and whether the bar effect is related to bar and/or parent galaxy properties. The distributions of all parameters analysed are different for barred and unbarred galaxies, except for the R23 metallicity tracer and the oxygen abundance (from photoionisation models). The median values point towards (marginally) larger dust content, star formation rate per unit area, electron density and ionisation…
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