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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

On the effective oxygen yield in the disks of spiral galaxies

TLDR
In this article, the radial distribution of the effective yield of oxygen was analyzed for 14 spiral galaxies and it was shown that the radial gradient of oxygen abundance normalized to the optical radius has a tendency to be shallower in the systems with lower dark halo to stellar mass ratio within the optical range.
Abstract
The factors influencing chemical evolution of galaxies are poorly understood. Both gas inflow and gas outflow reduce a gas-phase abundance of heavy elements (metallicity) whereas the ongoing star formation continuously increases it. To exclude the stellar nucleosynthesis from consideration, we analyze for the sample of 14 spiral galaxies the radial distribution of the effective yield of oxygen $y_{eff}$, which would be identical to the true stellar yield (per stellar generation) $y_o$ if the evolution followed the closed box model. As the initial data for gas-phase abundance we used the O/H radial profiles from Moustakas, Kennicutt, Tremonti et al. (2010), based on two different calibrations (Pilyugin & Thuan 2005 (PT2005) and Kobulnicky & Kewley 2004 (KK2004) methods). In most of galaxies with the PT2005 calibration, which we consider as a preferred one, the yield $y_{eff}$ in the main disk ($R \ge 0.2~R_{25}$, where $R_{25}$ is the optical radius) increases with radius, remaining lower than the empirically found true stellar yield $y_o$. This may indicate the inflow of low-enriched gas predominantly to the inner disk regions, which reduces $y_{eff}$. We show that the maximal values of the effective yield in the main disks of galaxies, $y_{eff,max}$, anti-correlate with the total mass of galaxies and with the mass of their dark halo enclosed within $R_{25}$. It allows to propose the higher role of gas accretion for galaxies with massive halos. We also found that the radial gradient of oxygen abundance normalized to $R_{25}$ has a tendency to be shallower in the systems with lower dark halo to stellar mass ratio within the optical radius, which, if confirmed, gives evidences of the effective radial mixing of gas in galaxies with the relatively light dark matter halo.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stellar mass-to-light ratios and the Tully-Fisher relation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a suite of simplified spectrophotometric spiral galaxy evolution models to argue that there are substantial variations in stellar mass-to-light (M/L) ratios within and among galaxies, amounting to factors of between 3 and 7 in the optical and 2 in the near-infrared.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Star Formation Efficiency in Nearby Galaxies: Measuring Where Gas Forms Stars Effectively

TL;DR: In this paper, the star formation efficiency (SFE) per unit of gas in 23 nearby galaxies and compare it with expectations from proposed star formation laws and thresholds was measured, and the authors interpreted this decline as a strong dependence of giant molecular cloud (GMC) formation on environment.
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Metallicity Calibrations and the Mass-Metallicity Relation for Star-forming Galaxies

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of metallicity calibrations, AGN classification, and aperture covering fraction on the local mass-metallicity relation using 27,730 star-forming galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 4.
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Metallicities of 0.3 < z < 1.0 Galaxies in the GOODS-North Field

TL;DR: The authors measured nebular oxygen abundances for 204 emission-line galaxies with redshifts 0.3 -20, consistent with scenarios whereby the formation epoch for less massive galaxies is more recent than for massive galaxies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of cold gas accretion above a mass floor on galaxy scaling relations

TL;DR: In this article, a simple model for star-forming galaxies that accounts for the mass and redshift dependences of the star formation rate (SFR)-mass and Tully-Fisher (TF) relations from z {approx} 2 to the present is presented.
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