Chemical evolution of galaxies with an environment-dependent stellar initial mass function
Zhiqiang Yan

TL;DR
This study introduces a new galaxy chemical evolution model incorporating environment-dependent stellar initial mass functions, revealing impacts on galaxy properties and resolving previous timescale discrepancies.
Contribution
The paper develops the first GCE code, GalIMF, integrating an empirically calibrated, environment-dependent IMF variation theory, advancing galaxy evolution modeling.
Findings
Galaxy properties like mass and star formation history are affected by the non-canonical IMF.
The model provides independent estimates of galaxy formation timescales.
It resolves discrepancies between stellar population synthesis and chemical enrichment timescales.
Abstract
The presented study gives a comprehensive overview of the theory and the evidence for a systematically varying stellar initial mass function (IMF). Then we focus on the impact of this paradigm change, that is, from the universal invariant IMF to a variable IMF, on galaxy chemical evolution (GCE) studies. For this aim, we developed the first GCE code, GalIMF, that is able to incorporate the empirically calibrated environment-dependent IMF variation theory, the integrated galactic initial mass function (IGIMF) theory. In this theory, the galaxy-wide IMF is calculated by summing all the IMFs in all embedded star clusters which formed throughout the galaxy in 10 Myr time epochs. The GalIMF code recalculates the galaxy-wide IMF at each time step because the integrated galaxy-wide IMF depends on the galactic star formation rate and metallicity. The resulting galaxy-wide IMF and metal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
