339 research outputs found
Galactic Winds and the Photo-chemical Evolution of Elliptical Galaxies: The Classic Model Revisited
We consider the simultaneous chemical, photometric, and gaseous thermal
energy evolution of elliptical galaxies. The evolution of chemical abundances
in the intracluster medium (ICM) is set by the differing timescales for gas
ejection, via supernovae (SNe)-driven winds, from dwarf, normal, and giant
ellipticals, and is monitored concurrently. Emphasis is placed upon the
influence of, and sensitivity to, the underlying stellar initial mass function
(IMF), star formation efficiency, supernovae Type Ia rates, supernovae remnant
(SNR) dynamics, and the most recent advances in stellar nucleosynthesis. Unlike
many previous studies, we adhere to a wide range of optical (e.g.
colour-metallicity-luminosity relationship) and x-ray (e.g. recent ASCA ICM
abundance measurements) observational constraints. IMFs biased toward high mass
stars, at least during the early phases of star formation, are implicated in
order to satisfy all the observational constraints.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, also available at
http://msowww.anu.edu.au/~gibson/publications.html, MNRAS, in pres
A Comparison of Three Elliptical Galaxy Photo-chemical Evolution Codes
Working within the classic supernovae-driven wind framework for elliptical
galaxy evolution, we perform a systematic investigation into the discrepancies
between the predictions of three contemporary codes -- Arimoto & Yoshii (1987,
A&A, 173, 23), Bressan et al. (1994, ApJS, 94, 63), and Gibson (1996a, MNRAS,
278, 829; 1996b, MNRAS, submitted). By being primarily concerned with
reproducing the present-day colour-metallicity-luminosity (CML) relations
amongst ellipticals, the approaches taken in the theoretical modelling have
managed to obscure many of the hidden differences between the codes. Targeting
the timescale for the onset of the initial galactic wind t_GW as a primary
``difference'' indicator, we demonstrate exactly how and why each code is able
to claim successful reproduction of the CML relations, despite possessing
apparently incompatible input ingredients.Comment: 30 pages, LaTeX, 3 figures available from
http://msowww.anu.edu.au/~gibson/publications.html, to be published in Sept
1996 ApJ, Part
CHEMICAL ABUNDANCES IN CLUSTERS OF GALAXIES
We study the origin of iron and alpha-elements (O, Mg, Si) in clusters of
galaxies. In particular, we discuss the [O/Fe] ratio and the iron
mass-to-luminosity ratio in the intracluster medium (ICM) and their link to the
chemical and dynamical evolution of elliptical and lenticular galaxies. We
adopt a detailed model of galactic evolution incorporating the development of
supernovae- driven galactic winds which pollute the ICM with enriched ejecta.
We demonstrate \it quantitatively \rm the crucial dependence upon the assumed
stellar initial mass function in determining the evolution of the mass and
abundances ratios of heavy elements in typical model ICMs. We show that
completely opposite behaviours of [alpha/Fe] ratios (\ie positive versus
negative ratios) can be obtained by varying the initial mass function without
altering the classic assumptions regarding type Ia supernovae progenitors or
their nucleosynthesis. Our results indicate that models incorporating somewhat
flatter-than-Salpeter initial mass functions (ie x approx 1, as opposed to
x=1.35) are preferred, provided the intracluster medium iron mass-to-luminosity
ratio, preliminary [alpha/Fe]>0 ASCA results, and present-day type Ia
supernovae rates, are to be matched. A simple Virgo cluster simulation which
adheres to these constraints shows that approx 70% of the measured ICM iron
mass has its origin in type II supernovae, with the remainder being synthesized
in type Ia systems.Comment: 25 pages of uuencoded compressed PostScript. 4 PostScript figures and
4 PostScript tables available from
http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~bkg/gibson.html Accepted for publication
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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