Reconstructing chemical enrichment pathways in disc galaxies: A phylogenetic approach
Brian Tapia-Contreras, Patricia B. Tissera, Emanuel Sillero, Paula Jofr\'e, Keaghan Yaxley, Xia Hua, Robert M. Yates, \'Alvaro M\'arquez S., Theosamuele Signor, Payel Das, \'Alvaro Rojas-Arriagada, Claudia Aguilera-G\'omez, Francisco Jara-Ferreira, Robert A. Foley

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel application of phylogenetic methods to analyze the chemical evolution of stellar populations in simulated disc galaxies, revealing distinct assembly histories in different galactic regions.
Contribution
It demonstrates the use of galactic phylogenetics to reconstruct galaxy assembly histories from chemical data, a new approach in astrophysics.
Findings
Inner ring shows rapid early enrichment with a hierarchical structure.
Outer ring exhibits more symmetric, gradual enrichment patterns.
Structural indices differ significantly between regions, robust for small samples.
Abstract
Phylogenetic methods, traditionally used in biology to trace the evolutionary relationships among species, are emerging as a powerful framework to reconstruct evolutionary processes in galaxies from chemical information. We apply galactic phylogenetics to study the chemical evolution of stellar populations in distinct regions of a simulated disc galaxy, assessing its capability to unveil assembly histories. We used a high-resolution simulation that follows the chemical enrichment of an isolated disc galaxy, by different stellar progenitors. We track gas particles as they turn into stars and inherit their parent gas chemical composition. Target particles are selected to store the chemical history of each chemical element considered in the simulation. Two regions were analysed: an inner ring, influenced by early bar-driven inflows, and an outer ring, shaped by spiral arms. We built…
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