Connecting Chemical Enrichment with Resolved Star Formation Histories
Christopher T. Garling, Alex M. Garcia, Niusha Ahvazi, Nitya Kallivayalil, Kristen B. W. McQuinn, Robert Feldmann, Roger E. Cohen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new framework linking galaxy chemical enrichment histories with resolved star formation histories, validated on Local Group dwarfs and compared with cosmological simulations to understand galaxy formation physics.
Contribution
A novel, self-consistent method integrating chemical evolution with resolved SFHs, validated on dwarf galaxies and compared with cosmological models to explore feedback effects.
Findings
FIREbox best reproduces WLM's enrichment history.
TNG50 and Galacticus predict higher early-time metallicities.
Differences in feedback models cause variation in chemical evolution predictions.
Abstract
We present a new framework for modeling the chemical enrichment histories of galaxies by integrating the chemical evolution with resolved star formation histories (SFHs) derived from color-magnitude diagrams. This novel approach links the time evolution of the metallicity of the star-forming ISM to the cumulative stellar mass formed in the galaxy, enabling a physically motivated, self-consistent description of chemical evolution. We apply this methodology to four isolated, gas-rich Local Group dwarf galaxies -- WLM, Aquarius, Leo A, and Leo P -- using deep HST and JWST imaging. For WLM, Aquarius, and Leo A, we independently validate our metallicity evolution results using ages and metallicities of individual red giant stars with spectroscopic measurements, finding good agreement. We quantify systematic uncertainties by repeating our analysis with multiple stellar evolution and…
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