We simulate cosmic chemical enrichment with a hydrodynamical model including
supernova and hypernova feedback. We find that the majority of stars in
present-day massive galaxies formed in much smaller galaxies at high redshifts,
despite their late assembly times. The hypernova feedback drives galactic
outflows efficiently in low mass galaxies, and these winds eject heavy elements
into the intergalactic medium. The ejected baryon fraction is larger for less
massive galaxies, correlates well with stellar metallicity. The observed
mass-metallicity relation is well reproduced as a result of the mass-dependent
galactic winds. We also predict the cosmic supernova and gamma-ray burst rate
histories.Comment: Proceedings of the CRAL-Conference Series I "Chemodynamics: from
first stars to local galaxies