The earliest phases of CNO enrichment in galaxies
Martina Rossi, Donatella Romano, Alessio Mucciarelli, Edoardo, Ceccarelli, Davide Massari, Giovanni Zamorani

TL;DR
This paper investigates the early chemical evolution of CNO elements in galaxies, highlighting the role of Population III stars in explaining observed abundance scatter and high N/O ratios in distant galaxies like GN-z11.
Contribution
It introduces a stochastic chemical evolution model incorporating Pop III stars, providing new insights into early CNO enrichment and explaining observed abundance patterns.
Findings
Pop III stars' supernovae explain CNO abundance scatter in MW halo stars.
Model predicts CNO ratios at different cosmic epochs.
High N/O in GN-z11 can be explained by Pop III star enrichment.
Abstract
Context. The recent detection of nitrogen-enhanced, metal-poor galaxies at high redshift by the James Webb Space Telescope has sparked renewed interest in exploring the chemical evolution of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen (the CNO elements) at early times, prompting fresh inquiries into their origins. Aims. The main goal of this paper is to shed light onto the early evolution of the main CNO isotopes in our Galaxy and in young distant systems, such as GN-z11 at z=10.6. Methods. To this aim, we incorporate a stochastic star-formation component into a chemical evolution model calibrated with high-quality Milky Way (MW) data, focusing on the contribution of Population III (Pop III) stars to the early chemical enrichment. Results. By comparing the model predictions with CNO abundance measurements from high-resolution spectroscopy of an homogeneous sample of Galactic halo stars, we first…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies
