We computed the chemical evolution of spiral bulges hosting Seyfert nuclei,
based on updated chemical and spectro-photometrical evolution models for the
bulge of our Galaxy, made predictions about other quantities measured in
Seyferts, and modeled the photometry of local bulges. The chemical evolution
model contains detailed calculations of the Galactic potential and of the
feedback from the central supermassive black hole, and the spectro-photometric
model covers a wide range of stellar ages and metallicities. We followed the
evolution of bulges in the mass range 10^9 - 10^{11} Msun by scaling the star
formation efficiency and the bulge scalelength as in the inverse-wind scenario
for elliptical galaxies, and considering an Eddington limited accretion onto
the central supermassive black hole. We successfully reproduced the observed
black hole-host bulge mass relation. The observed nuclear bolometric luminosity
is reproduced only at high redshift or for the most massive bulges; in the
other cases, at z = 0 a rejuvenation mechanism is necessary. The black hole
feedback is in most cases not significant in triggering the galactic wind. The
observed high star formation rates and metal overabundances are easily
achieved, as well as the constancy of chemical abundances with redshift and the
bulge present-day colours. Those results are not affected if we vary the index
of the stellar IMF from x=0.95 to x=1.35; a steeper IMF is instead required in
order to reproduce the colour-magnitude relation and the present K-band
luminosity of the bulge.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in A&