Bibcode
Gargiulo, I. D.; Cora, S. A.; Padilla, N. D.; Muñoz Arancibia, A. M.; Ruiz, A. N.; Orsi, A. A.; Tecce, T. E.; Weidner, C.; Bruzual, G.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 446, Issue 4, p.3820-3841
Advertised on:
2
2015
Citations
77
Refereed citations
74
Description
We make use of a semi-analytical model of galaxy formation to
investigate the origin of the observed correlation between [α/Fe]
abundance ratios and stellar mass in elliptical galaxies. We implement a
new galaxy-wide stellar initial mass function (IMF; top-heavy integrated
galaxy initial mass function, TH-IGIMF) in the semi-analytic model SAG
(acronym for semi-analytic galaxies) and evaluate its impact on the
chemical evolution of galaxies. The star formation rate (SFR) dependence
of the slope of the TH-IGIMF is found to be key to reproducing the
correct [α/Fe]-stellar mass relation. Massive galaxies reach
higher [α/Fe] abundance ratios because they are characterized by
more top-heavy IMFs as a result of their higher SFR. As a consequence of
our analysis, the value of the minimum embedded star cluster mass and of
the slope of the embedded cluster mass function, which are free
parameters involved in the TH-IGIMF theory, are found to be as low as 5
and 2 M⊙, respectively. A mild downsizing trend is
present for galaxies generated assuming either a universal IMF or a
variable TH-IGIMF. We find that, regardless of galaxy mass, older
galaxies (with formation redshifts ≳2) are formed in shorter
time-scales (≲2 Gyr), thus achieving larger [α/Fe] values.
Hence, the time-scale of galaxy formation alone cannot explain the slope
of the [α/Fe]-galaxy mass relation, but is responsible for the big
dispersion of [α/Fe] abundance ratios at fixed stellar mass. We
further test the hypothesis of a TH-IGIMF in elliptical galaxies by
looking into mass-to-light ratios, and luminosity functions. Models with
a TH-IGIMF are also favoured by these constraints. In particular,
mass-to-light ratios agree with observed values for massive galaxies
while being overpredicted for less massive ones; this overprediction is
present regardless of the IMF considered.