Constraining sub-grid physics with high-redshift spatially-resolved metallicity distributions
Metadatos
Title:
Constraining sub-grid physics with high-redshift spatially-resolved metallicity distributions
Author:
Gibson, Brad K.; Pilkington, Kate; Brook, Chris B A; Stinson, Gregory S.; Bailin, Jeremy
Entity:
UAM. Departamento de Física Teórica
Publisher:
ESO
Date:
2013-06-11
Citation:
10.1051/0004-6361/201321239
Astronomy and Astrophysics 554 (2013): A47
ISSN:
0004-6361 (print); 1432-0746 (online)
DOI:
10.1051/0004-6361/201321239
Funded by:
B.K.G. acknowledges the support of the UK's Science & Technology Facilities Council (ST/J001341/1). K.P. acknowledges the support of STFC through its PhD Studentship programme (ST/F007701/1). The generous allocation of resources from STFC's DiRAC Facility (COSMOS: Galactic Archaelogy) is gratefully acknowledged. We also thank the DEISA consortium, co-funded through EU FP6 project RI-031513 and the FP7 project RI-222919, for support within the DEISA Extreme Computing Initiative, and the University of Central Lancashire's High Preformance Computing Facility
Project:
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/222919
Editor's Version:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201321239
Subjects:
Galaxies: abundances; Galaxies: evolution; Galaxies: formation; Galaxy: disk; Física
Note:
Astronomy and Astrophysics 544 (2013): A47 reproduced with permission from Astronomy & Astrophysics
Rights:
© 2013 ESO
Abstract:
Aims. We examine the role of energy feedback in shaping the distribution of metals within cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of L∗ disc galaxies. While negative abundance gradients today provide a boundary condition for galaxy evolution models, in support of inside-out disc growth, empirical evidence as to whether abundance gradients steepen or flatten with time remains highly contradictory.
Methods. We made use of a suite of L∗ discs, realised with and without “enhanced” feedback. All the simulations were produced using the smoothed particle hydrodynamics code Gasoline, and their in situ gas-phase metallicity gradients traced from redshift z∼ 2 to the present-day. Present-day age-metallicity relations and metallicity distribution functions were derived for each system.
Results. The “enhanced” feedback models, which have been shown to be in agreement with a broad range of empirical scaling relations, distribute energy and re-cycled ISM material over large scales and predict the existence of relatively “flat” and temporally invariant abundance gradients. Enhanced feedback schemes reduce significantly the scatter in the local stellar age-metallicity relation and, especially, the [O/Fe]−[Fe/H] relation. The local [O/Fe] distribution functions for our L∗ discs show clear bimodality, with peaks at [O/Fe] = −0.05 and +0.05 (for stars with [Fe/H] > −1), consistent with our earlier work on dwarf discs.
Conclusions. Our results with “enhanced” feedback are inconsistent with our earlier generation of simulations realised with “conservative” feedback. We conclude that spatially-resolved metallicity distributions, particularly at high-redshift, offer a unique and under-utilised constraint on the uncertain nature of stellar feedback processes
Show full item record