Are Nucleosynthetic Yields Universal? Interpreting the Multi-Elemental Abundances of Quiescent Galaxies over Cosmic Time Using Milky Way Stars
Aliza G. Beverage, David H. Weinberg, Mariska Kriek, Nicole Marcelina Gountanis, Andrew B. Newman, Daniel R. Weisz

TL;DR
This study uses Milky Way abundance trends as proxies to interpret multi-elemental abundances in quiescent galaxies across cosmic time, revealing largely universal nucleosynthetic yields and simplifying galaxy chemical evolution modeling.
Contribution
It introduces an empirical framework that bypasses yield uncertainties, successfully predicting element abundances in galaxies at various redshifts using Milky Way data.
Findings
Median offset of ~0.05 dex in abundance predictions compared to observed data.
Predictions succeed with just Mg and Fe, indicating simple models suffice.
Empirical yields are largely universal across different galaxy types.
Abstract
The detailed abundance patterns of quiescent galaxies offer powerful constraints on their formation and evolution. Yet physical insight remains elusive, as nucleosynthetic yields are notoriously uncertain. We introduce a framework that circumvents this problem by using Milky Way abundance trends as empirical proxies for the yields. Applied to quiescent galaxies spanning three redshifts, SDSS (), LEGA-C (), and JWST/SUSPENSE (), our approach recovers the - and Fe-peak abundances with a median offset of ~0.05 dex across 14 elements, compared to ~0.23 dex for theoretical yields. The largest discrepancies arise in N, Sr, Ba, and (at ) C, all of which depend on AGB enrichment, a channel we do not explicitly model. We explore the impact of a top-heavy IMF on our predictions and find that it can shift the IMF-averaged core-collapse supernova yields by…
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