On the influence of the environment on galactic chemical abundances
L.S.Pilyugin, E.K.Grebel, I.A.Zinchenko, Y.A.Nefedyev, L.Mattsson

TL;DR
This study investigates how the environment influences chemical abundances in late-type galaxies, finding that environmental effects are minor and do not significantly alter the metallicity-mass relation across different densities.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis showing that environmental density has limited impact on galactic chemical abundances, challenging previous assumptions about environmental influence.
Findings
Galaxies in dense environments have slightly higher oxygen and nitrogen abundances.
The abundance excess decreases with increasing galaxy mass and decreasing environmental density.
Environmental effects are not the primary factor in the chemical evolution of late-type galaxies.
Abstract
We examine the influence of the environment on the chemical abundances of late-type galaxies with masses of 10^9.1 M_sun - 10^11 M_sun using data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey(SDSS). We find that the environmental influence on galactic chemical abundances is strongest for galaxies with masses of 10^9.1 M_sun to 10^9.6 Msun. The galaxies in the densest environments may exceed the average oxygen abundances by about 0.05 dex (the median value of the overabundances for 101 galaxies in the densest environments) and show higher abundances in nitrogen by about 0.1. The abundance excess decreases with increasing galaxy mass and with decreasing environmental density. Since only a small fraction of late-type galaxies is located in high-density environments these galaxies do not have a significant influence on the general X/H - M relation. The metallicity - mass relations for isolated galaxies…
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