The stellar metallicity distribution function of galaxies in the CALIFA survey
A. Mej\'ia-Narv\'aez (1), S. F. S\'anchez (1), E. A. D. Lacerda (1),, L. Carigi (1), L. Galbany (2), B. Husemann (3), R. Garc\'ia-Benito (4), ((1) Instituto de Astronom\'ia, Universidad Nacional Aut\'onoma de M\'exico,, (2) Departamento de F\'isica Te\'orica y del Cosmos

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to analyze the chemical structure of galaxies using stellar metallicity distribution functions derived from CALIFA survey data, revealing complex metallicity patterns and gradients.
Contribution
The study presents a novel approach to extract and analyze the stellar MDF from integral field spectroscopy, providing insights into galaxy chemical evolution.
Findings
Massive galaxies have narrower MDFs than low-mass ones.
Radial MDF profiles show known negative and positive gradients based on galaxy type.
Multi-modal MDFs are common in galaxy outskirts and centers.
Abstract
We present a novel method to retrieve the chemical structure of galaxies using integral field spectroscopy data through the stellar Metallicity Distribution Function (MDF). This is the probability distribution of observing stellar populations having a metallicity . We apply this method to a set of galaxies from the CALIFA survey. We present the behaviour of the MDF as a function of the morphology, the stellar mass and the radial distance. We use the stellar metallicity radial profiles retrieved as the first moment of the MDF, as an internal test for our method. The gradients in these radial profiles are consistent with the known trends: they are negative in massive early-type galaxies and tend to positive values in less massive late-type ones. We find that these radial profiles may not convey the complex chemical structure of some galaxy types. Overall, low mass galaxies…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
