The history of stellar metallicity in a simulated disc galaxy
O. N. Snaith, J. Bailin, B. K. Gibson, E. F. Bell, G. Stinson, M., Valluri, J. Wadsley, H. Couchman

TL;DR
This study compares chemical distributions in simulated galaxies using different feedback models, revealing how feedback schemes influence substructure, age-metallicity relations, and the interpretation of stellar populations.
Contribution
It demonstrates how feedback mechanisms affect chemical substructure and age-metallicity relations in galaxy simulations, highlighting differences between traditional and early feedback models.
Findings
MUGS simulation shows abundant chemical substructure.
MaGICC simulation has reduced substructure due to fewer satellites.
Bulge and disc have distinct age-metallicity relations.
Abstract
We explore the chemical distribution of stars in a simulated galaxy. Using simulations of the same initial conditions but with two different feedback schemes (MUGS and MaGICC), we examine the features of the age-metallicity relation (AMR), and the three-dimensional age-metallicity-[O/Fe] distribution, both for the galaxy as a whole and decomposed into disc, bulge, halo, and satellites. The MUGS simulation, which uses traditional supernova feedback, is replete with chemical substructure. This sub- structure is absent from the MaGICC simulation, which includes early feedback from stellar winds, a modified IMF and more efficient feedback. The reduced amount of substructure is due to the almost complete lack of satellites in MaGICC. We identify a significant separation between the bulge and disc AMRs, where the bulge is considerably more metal-rich with a smaller spread in metallicity at…
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