Measuring the physical imprints of gas flows in galaxies I: Accretion rate histories
A. Camps-Fari\~na, P. S\'anchez-Bl\'azquez, S. Roca-F\`abrega, S. F., S\'anchez

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxies accrete pristine gas over cosmic time by analyzing stellar populations and chemical evolution, revealing mass-dependent accretion histories and the importance of gas supply for sustained star formation.
Contribution
It introduces a method to estimate gas accretion histories from stellar metallicities and ages, highlighting mass and star formation rate dependencies in galaxy evolution.
Findings
More massive galaxies accrete more gas at higher redshifts.
Galaxies with higher current star formation rates have more persistent accretion histories.
Gas supply is essential for ongoing star formation; its loss halts star formation.
Abstract
Galaxies are expected to accrete pristine gas from their surroundings to sustain their star formation over cosmic timescales. Its lower abundance affects the metallicity of the ISM in which stars are born, leaving chemical imprints in the stellar populations. We measure the amount of pristine gas that galaxies accrete during their lifetime, using information on the ages and abundances of their stellar populations and a chemical evolution model. We also aim to determine the efficiency of star formation over time. We derived star formation histories and metallicity histories for a sample of 8523 galaxies from the MaNGA survey. We use the former to predict the evolution of the metallicity in a closed-box scenario, and estimate for each epoch the gas accretion rate required to match these predictions with the measured stellar metallicity. Using only chemical parameters, we find that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhase Equilibria and Thermodynamics · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Pharmacological Effects and Assays
