Modeling the Ages and Chemical Abundances of Elliptical Galaxies
Nicole Marcelina Gountanis (1), David H. Weinberg (1), Aliza G., Beverage (2), Nathan R. Sandford (3), Charlie Conroy (4), Mariska Kriek (5), ((1) Department of Astronomy, Center for Cosmology, AstroParticle, Physics, The Ohio State University, (2) Astronomy Department

TL;DR
This study uses chemical evolution models to analyze elliptical galaxies' ages and chemical abundances, revealing that observed trends are largely insensitive to star formation history details but highlight discrepancies in magnesium enhancement predictions.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that simple stellar population fits approximate composite stellar population properties and explores the impact of supernova yields and star formation efficiency on galaxy chemical evolution.
Findings
Older galaxies have higher <[Mg/Fe]> ratios.
Predicted <[Mg/H]> and <[Mg/Fe]> relations are insensitive to SFH parameters.
Models underpredict observed <[Mg/Fe]> ratios unless supernova yields are adjusted.
Abstract
Spectroscopic studies of elliptical galaxies show that their stellar population ages, mean metallicity, and -enhancement traced by [Mg/Fe] all increase with galaxy stellar mass or velocity dispersion. We use one-zone galactic chemical evolution (GCE) models with a flexible star formation history (SFH) to model the age, [Mg/H], and [Mg/Fe] inferred from simple stellar population (SSP) fits to observed ellipticals at and . We show that an SSP fit to the spectrum computed from a full GCE model gives ages and abundances close to the light-weighted, logarithmically averaged values of the composite stellar population, <age>, <[Mg/H]>, and <[Mg/Fe]>. With supernova Mg and Fe yields fixed to values motivated by Milky Way stellar populations, we find that predicted <[Mg/H]>-<age> and <[Mg/Fe]>-<age> relations are surprisingly insensitive to SFH parameters: older…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
