Understanding inverse metallicity gradients in galactic discs as a consequence of inside-out formation
Ralph Sch\"onrich, Paul McMillan

TL;DR
This paper explores how inside-out galaxy formation influences radial metallicity gradients, explaining observed inverse gradients at high redshift and in the Milky Way's thick disc through an analytical chemical evolution model.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking inside-out formation to metallicity gradient evolution, reconciling high-redshift inverse gradients with local observations.
Findings
Inside-out formation steepens ISM metallicity gradients.
Inverse metallicity gradients can result from high central gas-loss and redistribution.
Positive dV_{φ}/d[Fe/H] indicates similar timescales for formation and enrichment processes.
Abstract
The early stages of a galaxy's evolution leave an imprint on its metallicity distribution. We discuss the origins and evolution of radial metallicity gradients in discs of spiral galaxies using an analytical chemical evolution model. We explain how radial metallicity gradients in stellar populations are determined by three factors: the radial metallicity profile of the star-forming ISM, radial changes in the star-formation history (in particular inside-out formation), and radial mixing of stars. Under reasonable assumptions, inside-out formation steepens the negative ISM metallicity gradient, but contributes positively to the stellar metallicity gradient, up to inverting the metallicity profile to a positive d[Fe/H]/dR. This reconciles steep negative d[Fe/H]/dR in some high redshift galaxies to generally flatter gradients in local observations. We discuss the evidence for inverse…
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