The Stellar Chemical Abundances of Simulated Massive Galaxies at $z = 2$
Jee-Ho Kim, Sirio Belli, Rainer Weinberger

TL;DR
This study uses the IllustrisTNG simulation to explore how stellar chemical abundances in massive galaxies at redshift 2 depend on galaxy size and measurement aperture, revealing a universal abundance profile shape.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of stellar abundance profiles and their dependence on galaxy size and aperture effects, supported by a simple chemical enrichment model.
Findings
Abundance measurements are strongly affected by galaxy size and measurement aperture.
A nearly universal, steeply declining stellar abundance profile explains observed trends.
Gas-phase abundance profiles are primarily shaped by gas fraction and star formation efficiency.
Abstract
We analyze the stellar abundances of massive galaxies () at in the IllustrisTNG simulation with the goal of guiding the interpretation of current and future observations, particularly from the James Webb Space Telescope. We find that the effective size, , of galaxies strongly affects the abundance measurements: both [Mg/H] and [Fe/H] are anti-correlated with , while the relative abundance [Mg/Fe] slightly increases with . The enhancement as tracked by [Mg/Fe] traces the formation timescale of a galaxy weakly, and mostly depends on . Aperture effects are important: measuring the stellar abundances within 1~kpc instead of within can make a large difference. These results are all due to a nearly universal, steeply declining stellar abundance profile that does not scale with galaxy size -- small galaxies appear metal-rich…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
