Nitrogen and oxygen abundances in the Local Universe
Fiorenzo Vincenzo, Francesco Belfiore, Roberto Maiolino, Francesca, Matteucci, Paolo Ventura

TL;DR
This study models the chemical evolution of star-forming galaxies in the Local Universe, explaining nitrogen and oxygen abundance patterns through stellar sources, star formation efficiency, and galactic winds.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model that accounts for observed (N/O) vs. (O/H) trends, emphasizing the roles of stellar yields, galactic winds, and initial mass function variations.
Findings
Low-metallicity plateau length depends on star formation efficiency.
Differential galactic winds are necessary to match observed abundance ratios.
A bottom-heavy initial mass function better reproduces the data.
Abstract
We present chemical evolution models aimed at reproducing the observed (N/O) vs. (O/H) abundance pattern of star forming galaxies in the Local Universe. We derive gas-phase abundances from SDSS spectroscopy and a complementary sample of low-metallicity dwarf galaxies, making use of a consistent set of abundance calibrations. This collection of data clearly confirms the existence of a plateau in the (N/O) ratio at very low metallicity, followed by an increase of this ratio up to high values as the metallicity increases. This trend can be interpreted as due to two main sources of nitrogen in galaxies: i) massive stars, which produce small amounts of pure primary nitrogen and are responsible for the (N/O) ratio in the low metallicity plateau; ii) low- and intermediate-mass stars, which produce both secondary and primary nitrogen and enrich the interstellar medium with a time delay relative…
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