Evolution and star formation history of NGC300 from a chemical evolution model with radial gas inflows
Xiaoyu Kang, Rolf-Peter Kudritzki, Xiaobo Gong, Fenghui Zhang

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of NGC300, showing that radial gas inflows, even at low velocities, significantly influence its metallicity, star formation, and gas distribution, aligning well with observed properties.
Contribution
The paper introduces a chemical evolution model for NGC300 that incorporates radial gas inflows and inside-out disc formation, improving the match with observed radial profiles.
Findings
Radial gas inflows steepen gas and metallicity profiles.
Inflow velocities as low as -0.1 km/s impact galaxy evolution.
Model predicts a flattening metallicity gradient over time.
Abstract
In the build-up of galactic discs gas infall is an important ingredient and it produces radial gas inflows as a physical consequence of angular momentum conservation, since the infalling gas on to the disc at a specific radius has lower angular momentum than the circular motions of the gas at the point of impact. NGC300 is a well studied isolated, bulge-less, and low-mass disc galaxy ideally suited for an investigation of galaxy evolution with radial gas inflows. To investigate the effects of radial gas inflows on the physical properties of NGC300, a chemical evolution model for NGC300 is constructed by assuming its disc builds up progressively by infalling of metall-free gas and outflowing of metal-enriched gas. Radial gas inflows are also considered in the model. Our model including the radial gas inflows and an inside-out disc formation scenario can simultaneously reproduce the…
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