We have developed a detailed standard chemical evolution model to study the
evolution of all the chemical elements up to the iron peak in the solar
vicinity. We consider that the Galaxy was formed through two episodes of
exponentially decreasing infall, out of extragalactic gas. In a first infall
episode, with a duration of ∼ 1 Gyr, the halo and the thick disk were
assembled out of primordial gas, while the thin disk formed in a second episode
of infall of slightly enriched extragalactic gas, with much longer timescale.
The model nicely reproduces the main observational constraints of the solar
neighborhood, and the calculated elemental abundances at the time of the solar
birth are in excellent agreement with the solar abundances. By the inclusion of
metallicity dependent yields for the whole range of stellar masses we follow
the evolution of 76 isotopes of all the chemical elements between hydrogen and
zinc. Those results are confronted with a large and recent body of
observational data, and we discuss in detail the implications for stellar
nucleosynthesis.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, submitted to A&