Swinburne
Browse

Effects of Type II and Type Ia Supernovae feedback on the chemodynamical evolution of elliptical galaxies

Download (971.3 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-13, 02:32 authored by Daisuke Kawata
We numerically investigate the dynamical and chemical processes of the formation of elliptical galaxies in a cold dark matter (CDM) universe in order to understand the origin of the mass dependence of the photometric properties of elliptical galaxies. Our three-dimensional tree N-body/smoothed particle hydrodynamics numerical simulations of elliptical galaxy formation take into account both Type II and Type Ia supernovae (SNe II and SNe Ia, respectively) and follow the time evolution of the abundances of several chemical elements (C, O, Ne, Mg, Si, and Fe). Moreover, we compare different strengths of SNe feedback. In combination with stellar population synthesis, we derive the photometric properties of simulation end products, including the magnitude, color, half-light radius, and abundance ratios, and compare them with the observed scaling relations directly and quantitatively. We find that the extremely strong influence of SNe is required to reproduce the observed color-magnitude relation, when we assume each SN yields energy of 4×1051 ergs and that 90% of this energy is ejected as kinetic feedback. The feedback affects the evolution of lower mass systems more strongly and induces the galactic wind by which a larger fraction of gas is blown out in a lower mass system. Finally, higher mass systems become more metal-rich and have redder colors than lower mass systems. We emphasize, based on our simulation results, that the galactic wind is triggered mainly by SNe Ia rather than SNe II. In addition, we examined the Kormendy relation, which prescribes the size of elliptical galaxies, and the [Mg/Fe] magnitude relation, which provides a strong constraint on the star formation history.

History

Available versions

PDF (Published version)

ISSN

0004-637X

Journal title

Astrophysical Journal

Volume

558

Issue

2

Pagination

16 pp

Publisher

University of Chicago Press

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2001 The American Astronomical Society. The paper is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

Usage metrics

    Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC