The physics of gas phase metallicity gradients in galaxies
Piyush Sharda, Mark R. Krumholz, Emily Wisnioski, John C. Forbes,, Christoph Federrath, Ayan Acharyya

TL;DR
This paper introduces a first-principles model explaining the evolution of gas phase metallicity gradients in galaxies, accounting for various physical processes and matching observations across cosmic time.
Contribution
The model provides a unified framework for understanding metallicity gradients, incorporating key physical ratios and explaining their evolution from high to low redshift.
Findings
Most galaxy metallicity gradients are in equilibrium across redshifts.
Gradients are governed by the competition between advection, production, and accretion.
The model matches observed gradient evolution in different galaxy types.
Abstract
We present a new model for the evolution of gas phase metallicity gradients in galaxies from first principles. We show that metallicity gradients depend on four ratios that collectively describe the metal equilibration timescale, production, transport, consumption, and loss. Our model finds that most galaxy metallicity gradients are in equilibrium at all redshifts. When normalized by metal diffusion, metallicity gradients are governed by the competition between radial advection, metal production, and accretion of metal-poor gas from the cosmic web. The model naturally explains the varying gradients measured in local spirals, local dwarfs, and high-redshift star-forming galaxies. We use the model to study the cosmic evolution of gradients across redshift, showing that the gradient in Milky Way-like galaxies has steepened over time, in good agreement with both observations and…
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