Title: Chemical Evolution of the Milky Way
1Chemical Evolution of the Milky Way
- Francesca Matteucci
- Astronomy Department
- Trieste University
2How to model galactic chemical evolution
- Initial conditions (open or closed-box chemical
composition of the gas) - Birthrate function (SFRxIMF)
- Stellar yields (how elements are produced and
restored into the ISM) - Gas flows (infall, outflow, radial flow)
- Equations containing all of of this...
3Initial Conditions
- a) Start from a gas cloud already present at t0
(monolithic model). No flows allowed (closed-box) - b) Assume that the gas accumulates either fastly
or slowly and the system suffers outflows (open
model) - c) We assume that the gas at to is primordial
(no metals) - d) We assume that the gas at to is pre-enriched
by Pop III stars
4Star Formation History
- We define the stellar birthrate function as
- B(m,t) SFRxIMF
- The SFR is the star formation rate (how many
solar masses go into stars per unit time) - The IMF is the initial stellar mass function
describing the distribution of stars as a
function of stellar mass
5Parametrization of the SFR
- The most common parametrization is the Schmidt
(1959) law where the SFR is proportional to some
power (k2) of the gas density - Kennicutt (1998) suggested k1.5 from studying
star forming galaxies, but also a law depending
of the rotation angular speed of gas - Other parameters such as gas temperature,
viscosity and magnetic field are usually ignored -
6Kennicutts (1998) SFR
7SFR accounting for feedback
8The IMF
9The IMF
- Upper panel different IMFs
- Lower panel normalization of the multi-slope
IMFs to the Salpeter IMF - Figure from Boissier Prantzos (1999)
10The Infall law
- The infall rate can simply be constant in space
and time - Or described by an exponential law
11The outflow law
- The rate of gas loss from a galaxy through a
galactic wind can be expressed as
12Stellar Yields
- We call stellar yield the newly produced and the
already present mass of a given chemical element
eventually ejected by a star of mass m - Stellar yields depend upon the mass and the
chemical composition of the parent star
13Primary and Secondary elements
- We define primary element an element produced
directly from H and He - A typical primary element is carbon or oxygen
which originate from the 3- alpha reaction - We define secondary element an element produced
starting from metals already present in the star
at birth (e.g. Nitrogen produced in the CNO cycle)
14Simple Model and Secondary Elements
- The solution of the Simple Model of chemical
evolution (I.R.A.) for a secondary element Xs
formed from a seed element Z - Simple Model assumes I.R.A.
- Xs is proportional to Z(2)
- Xs/Z goes like Z
15Primary versus secondary
- Figure from Pettini et al. (2002)
- Small dots are extragalactic HII regions
- Red triangles are Damped Lyman-alpha systems
(DLA) - Dashed lines mark the solution of the simple
model for a primary and a secondary element
16Stellar Yields
- Low and intermediate mass stars (0.8-8 Msun)
produce He, N, C and heavy s-process elements.
They die as C-O white dwarfs, when single, and
can die as Type Ia SNe when binaries - Massive stars (Mgt8-10 Msun) they produce mainly
alpha-elements, some Fe, light s-process
elements and r-process elements and explode as
core-collapse SNe
17Stellar Yields
- Yields for Fe in massive stars (Woosley Weaver
1995 Thielemann et al. 1996 Nomoto et al. 1997
Rauscher et al. 2002, Limongi Chieffi 2003)
18Stellar Yields
- Mg yields from massive stars
- Big differences among different studies
- Mg yields are too low to reproduce the Mg
abundances in stars
19Stellar Yields
- Oxygen yields from massive stars
- Different studies agree on O yields
- Oxygen increases continuously with stellar mass
from 10 to 40 Msun - Not clear what happens for Mgt40 Msun
20Stellar Yields
- New yield from Nomoto et al. (2007) for Oxygen in
massive stars - They are computed for 4 different metallicities
21Stellar Yields
- Yields of Fe from massive stars from Nomoto et
al. (2007) - The yields are computed for 4 different
metallicities
22Type Ia SN progenitors
- Single-degenerate scenario Whelan Iben 1974
Han Podsiadlowsky 2004) a binary system with a
C-O white dwarf plus a MS star. When the star
becomes RG it starts accreting mass onto the WD - When the WD reaches the Chandrasekhar mass it
explodes by C-deflagration as Type Ia supernova
23Type Ia SN progenitors
- Double-Degenerate scenario (Iben Tutukov,
1984) two C-O WDs merge after loosing angular
momentum due to gravitational wave radiation - When the two WDs of 0.7 Msun merge, the
Chandrasekhar mass is reached and C-deflagration
occurs - The nucleosynthesis is the same in the two
scenarios
24Single-Degenerate scenario
25The clocks for the explosions of SNe Ia
- Single-Degenerate model the clock to the
explosion is given by the lifetime of the
secondary star, m2. The minimum time for the
appearence of the first Type Ia SN is t_SNIa
30Myr (the lifetime of a 8 Msun star) - Double-Degenerate model the clock is given by
the lifetime of the secondary plus the
gravitational time-delay. T_SNIa 35 Myr
Delta_grav 40 Myr - The maximum timescale is 10 Gyr in the SD
- and several Hubble times in the DD
26Type Ia SN nucleosynthesis
- A Chandrasekhar mass (1.44 Msun) explodes by
C-deflagration - C-deflagration produces 0.6 Msun of Fe plus
traces of other elements from C to Si
27Type II SNe
- Type II SNe arise from the core collapse of
massive stars (M8-40 Msun) and produce mainly
alpha-elements (O, Mg, Si, Ca...) and some Fe - Stars more massive can end up as Type Ib/c SNe,
they are also core collapse SNe (linked to
gamma-ray bursts)
28Basic Equations
29Definitions of variables
- dGi/dt is the rate of time variation of the gas
fraction in the form of an element i - Xi(t) is the abundance by mass of a given element
i - Qmi is a term containing all the information
about stellar evolution and nucleosynthesis
30Definition of variables
- A 0.05-0.09 is the fraction in the IMF of binary
systems of that particular type to give rise to
Type Ia SNe. B1-A - Tau_m is the lifetime of a star of mass m
- f(mu) is the distribution function of the mass
ratio in binary systems - A(t) and W(t) are the accretion and outflow rate,
respectively
31The formation of the Milky Way
- Eggen, Lynden-bell Sandage (1962) suggested a
rapid collapse lasting 300 Myr - Searle Zinn (1978) proposed a central collapse
but that the outer halo formed by mergers
32Different approaches in modelling the MW
- Serial approach halo, thick and thin disk form
as a continuous process (Matteucci Francois
1989) - Parallel approach the different galactic
component evolve at different rates but they are
inter-connected (Pardi, Ferrini Matteucci 1995)
33Different approaches in modelling the MW
- Two-infall approach halo and disk form out of
two different infall episodes (e.g. Chiappini,
Matteucci Gratton 1997 Alibes, Labay Canal
2001) - Stochastic approach mixing not efficient
especially in the early halo phases (e.g.
Tsujimoto et al. 1999 Argast et al. 2000 Oey
2000)
34The two-infall model for the formation of the MW
- The two-infall model of Chiappini, Matteucci
Gratton (1997) predicts two main episodes of gas
accretion - During the first one the halo and bulge formed,
the second gave rise to the disk
35Another scenario
- The creation of the Milky way
- Hera, flowed when she realized she had been
giving milk to Heracles and thrust him away her
breast
36Gas Infall at the present time
37Recipes for the two-infall model
- SFR- Kennicutts law with a dependence on the
surface gas density (exponent k1.5) plus a
dependence on the total surface mass density
(feedback). Threshold of 7 Msun/pc2 - IMF, Scalo (1986) normalized over a mass range of
0.1-100 solar masses - Exponential infall law with different timescales
for inner halo (1-2 Gyr) and disk (inside-out
formation with 7 Gyr at the S.N.)
38Recipes for the model
- Type Ia SNe- Single degenerate model (WDRG or MS
star), recipe from Greggio Renzini (1983) and
Matteucci Recchi (2001) - Minimum time for explosion 35 Myr (lifetime of a
8 solar masses star), confirmed by recent
findings (Mannucci et al. 2005, 2006) - Time for restoring the bulk of Fe in the S.N. is
1 Gyr (depends on the assumed SFR)
39Solar Vicinity
- We study first the solar vicinity, namely the
local ring at 8 kpc from the galactic center - Then we study the properties of the entire disk
from 4 to 22 Kpc - Finally we discuss the properties of the Bulge
40Stellar Lifetimes
41The star formation rate (threshold effects)
42Predicted SN rates
- Type II SN rate (blue) follows the SFR
- Type Ia SN rate (red) increases smoothly (small
peak at 1 Gyr)
43Time-delay model
- Blue line only Type II SNe produce Fe
- Red line only Type Ia SNe produce Fe
- Black line Type II SNe produce 1/3 of Fe and
Type Ia SNe produce 2/3 of Fe
44Specific prediction by the two-infall model
- The adoption of a threshold in the gas density
for the SFR creates a gap in the SFR - This gap occurs between the halo-thick disk and
the thin-disk phase - It is observed in the data
45G-dwarf distribution (Chiappini et al.)
46Different timescales for disk formation
47G-dwarf distribution
- Chiappini et al. (1997) , Alibes et al. (2001)
and Kotoneva et al. (2002) concluded that a good
fit to the G-dwarf metallicity distribution can
be obtained only with a time scale of disk
formation at the solar distance of 7-8 Gyr
48Evolution of the element abundances
- We follow the evolution in space and time of
35 chemical species (H, D, He, Li, C, N, O, Ne,
Mg, Si, S, Ca, Ti, K, Fe, Mn, Cr, Ni, Co, Sc,
Zn, Cu, Ba, Eu, Y, La, Sr plus other isotopes)
(Francois, FM et al.2004) - We solve a system of 35 equations where SFR, IMF,
nucleosynthesis and gas accretion are taken into
account - Basic yields from massive stars WW95, from
low-intermediate stars van den Hoeck Groenewegen
1997, from Type Ia SNe Iwamoto et al. 1999
49Results from Francois et al. 2004
50Results from Francois et al. 2004
51Results from Francois et al. 2004
52Corrected Yields
53Corrected Yields
54Corrected Yields
55Suggestions for the Yields
- Yields from Woosley Weaver 1995 (WW95), Iwamoto
et al. (1999) - Major corrections for Fe-peak elements !
- O, Fe, Si and Ca are ok. Mg should be increased
56C and N evolution
- Evolution of Carbon and Nitrogen as predicted by
the two-infall model of Chiappini, Matteucci
Gratton (1997) - The green line in the N plot is an euristic model
with primary N from massive stars
57Last data on Nitrogen
- From Ballero, FM Chiappini (2005)
- It shows new data (filled circles and triangles)
at low metallicity endorsing the suggestion that
N should be primary in massive star - Stellar rotation can produce such N (Meynet
Maeder 2002)
58Last data on N and C
- Primary nitrogen from rotating very metal poor
massive stars - Models from Chiappini et al. (2006) (dashed
lines) - Large squares from Israelian et al. 04 asterisks
from Spite et al. 05 pentagons from Nissen 04
59s- and r-process elements
- Data from Francois et al. (2007) with UVES on VLT
- Models Cescutti et al. (2006) red line, best
model, with Ba_s from 1-3 solar masses (Busso et
al. 01) and Ba_r from 10-30 solar masses
60s- and r- process elements
- Data from Francois et al. (200)
- Models from Cescutti et al. (2006) red line,
best model with Eu only r-process from 10-30
solar masses
61Abundance Gradients
- The abundances of heavy elements decrease with
galactocentric distance - in the disk
- Gradients of different elements are slightly
different (depending on their nucleosynthesis and
timescales of production) - Gradients are measured from HII regions, PNe, B
stars, open clusters and Cepheids
62How does the gradient form?
- If one assumes the disk to form inside-out,
namely that first collapses the gas which forms
the inner parts and then the gas which forms the
outer parts - Namely, if one assumes a timescale for the
formation of the disk increasing with
galactocentric distance, the gradients are well
reproduced
63Abundance gradients
- Predicted and observed abundance gradients from
Chiappini, Matteucci Romano (2001) - Data from HII regions, PNe and B stars, red dot
is the Sun - The gradients steepen with time (from blue to red)
64Abundance gradients
- Predictions from Boissier Prantzos (1999), no
threshold density in the SF - They predict the gradient to flatten in time
- The difference is due to the effect of the
threshold
65Abundance Gradients
- New data on Cepheids from Andrievsky al.(02,04)
(open blue circles) - Red triangles-OB stars from Daflon Cunha (2004)
- Blue filled hexagons are Cepheids from Yong et
al.(2006), blue open triangles are open clusters
from Young et al. 05, cian data from Carraro et
al.(2004)
66Abundance Gradients
- Blue filled hexagons from Andrievsky al.(02,04)
- Red squares are the average values
- For Barium there are not yet enough data to
compare
67Scenarios for Bulge formation
- Accretion of extant stellar systems which
eventually settle in the Galactic center - Accumulation either slow or rapid at the center
of the Galaxy of gas from the halo, or thick disk
or thin disk, and subsequent evolution slow or
fast
68The Galactic Bulge
- The first model for the chemical evolution of the
Bulge from Matteucci Brocato (1990) - Fast formation (lt1 Gyr) from halo gas and
subsequent fast evolution (high SF efficiency)
69The Galactic Bulge
- A more recent version of the Matteucci Brocato
(1990) figure - Different alpha/Fe patterns are expected for
different SF histories - Good tool to interpret high-redshift objects
70The Galactic Bulge
- A model for the Bulge (green line) from Ballero ,
FM, Origlia Rich (2007) - Yields from Francois et al. (04), SF efficiency
of 20 Gyr(-1), timescale of accretion 0.1 Gyr - Data from Zoccali et al. 06, Fulbright et al. 06,
Origlia Rich (04, 05)
71The Galactic Bulge
- Model (red, Ballero et al. 2007)
- Predicts large Mg to Fe for a large Fe interval
- Turning point at larger than solar Fe. Mg flatter
than O - Data from Zoccali et al. 06 Fulbright et al. 06,
Origlia Rich (04, 05)
72The Galactic Bulge
- Metallicity Distribution of Bulge stars, data
from Zoccali et al. (2003) and Fulbright et al.
(2006) (dot-dashed) - Models from Ballero et al. 07, with different SF
eff.
73The Galactic Bulge
- Models with different IMF
- The best IMF for the Bulge is flatter than in the
S.N and flatter than Salpeter - Best IMF x0.95 for Mgt 1 solar mass and x0.33
below
74Bulge vs. Thick and Thin Disk Stars
- Zoccali et al. (2006) compared new high
resolution data for the Bulge (green dots and red
crosses) with data for thick disk (yellow
triangles) and thin disk (blue crosses) - The Bulge stars are systematically more
overabundant in O
75Comparison with data
- Comparison between models of Immeli et al. (2004)
with data from Zoccali et al. (2006) - The best model (green line) predicts a very fast
Bulge formation - However, Immelis models have a fixed delay for
Type Ia SNe
76Conclusions on the Bulge
- The best model for the Bulge suggests that it is
very old and formed by means of a strong
starburst - The efficiency of SF was 20 times higher than in
the rest of the Galaxy - The IMF was very flat, as it is suggested for
starbursts - The timescale for the Bulge formation was 0.1 Gyr
and not longer than 0.5 Gyr
77Conclusions on the Milky Way
- The Disk at the solar ring formed on a time scale
not shorter than 7 Gyr - The whole Disk formed inside-out with timescales
of the order of 2 Gyr in the inner regions and 10
Gyr in the outer regions - The inner halo formed on a timescale not longer
than 2 Gyr, the outer halo formed on longer
timescales perhaps from accretion - Abundance gradients arise from the inside-out
Disk formation
78Dwarf Spheroidals of the Local Group
79SF and Hubble Sequence from Sandage
80SF and HS from Kennicutt
81Models for the Hubble Sequence
82Type Ia SN rate in galaxies
83Timescales for Type Ia SNe enrichment
- The typical timescale for the Type Ia SN
enrichment is the maximum in the Type Ia SN rate
(Matteucci Recchi 2001) - It depends on the star formation history of a
specific galaxy, IMF and stellar lifetimes
84Typical timescales for SNIa
- In ellipticals and bulges the timescale for the
maximum enrichment from Type Ia SNe is 0.3-0.5
Gyr - In the solar vicinity there is a first peak at 1
Gyr, then it decreases slightly (gap in the SF)
and increases again till 3 Gyr - In irregulars the peak is for a time gt 4 Gyr
85Time-delay model in different galaxies
86Interpretation of time-delay model
- Galaxies with intense SF (ellipticals and bulges)
show overabundance of alpha-elements for a large
Fe/H range - Galaxies with slow SF (irregulars) show instead
low alpha/Fe ratios at low Fe/H - The SFR determines the shape of the alpha/Fe
vs. Fe/H relations
87Identifying high-z objects
- Lyman-break galaxy cB58, data from Pettini et al.
2002 - The model predictions are for an elliptical
galaxy of 10(10) Msun (Matteucci Pipino 2002)
88Dating high-z objects
- The Lyman-break galaxy cB58
- Predicted abundance ratios versus redshift
- The estimated age is 35 Myr
89Conclusions on high-z objects
- Comparison between data and abundance ratios of
high-z objects suggests - DLA are probably dwarf irregulars or at most
external parts of disks - Lyman-break galaxies are probably small
ellipticals in the phase of galactic wind
90How do dSphs form?
- CDM models for galaxy formation predict dSph
systems (107 Msun) to be the first to form stars
(all stars should form lt 1Gyr) - Then heating and gas loss due to reionization
must have halted soon SF - Observationally, all dSph satellites of the MW
contain old stars indistinguishable from those of
Galactic globular clusters and they have
experienced SF for long periods (gt2 Gyr, Grebel
Gallagher, 04)
91Chemical Evolution of Dwarf Spheroidals
- Lanfranchi Matteucci (2003, 2004) proposed a
model which assumes the SF as derived by the CMDs - Initial baryonic masses 5x10(8)Msun
- A strong galactic wind occurs when the gas
thermal energy equates the gas potential energy.
DM ten times LM but diffuse (M/L today of the
order of 100) - The wind rate is assumed to be several times the
SFR
92Standard Model of LM03
- LM03 computed a standard models for dwarf
spheroidals - They assumed 1 long star formation episode (8
Gyr), a low star formation efficiency lt1
Gyr(-1) - They assumed that galactic winds are triggered by
SN explosions at rates gt 5 times the SFR . The
final mass is 10(7)Msun - The IMF is that of Salpeter (1955)
93Galactic winds
- LM03 included the energetics from SNe and stellar
winds to study the occurrence of galactic winds,
the condition for the wind being - Dark matter halos 10 times more massive than the
initial luminous mass (5x10(8) Msun) but not
very concentrated (see later)
94The binding energy of gas
95The binding energy of gas
96Binding energy of gas
- S is the ratio between the effective radius of
the galaxy and the radius of the dark matter core - We assume S0.10 in dSphs
97DM in Dwarf Spheroidals
- Mass to light ratios vs. Galaxy absolute V
magnitude (Gilmore et al. 2006) - The solid curve shows the relation expected if
all the dSphs contain about 4x10(7) Msun of DM
interior to their stellar distributions - No galaxy has a DM halo lt 5x10(7)Msun
98DM in dSphs
- Mass to light ratios in dSphs from Mateo et al.
(1998) - In the bottom panel the visual absolute magnitude
has been corrected for stellar evolution effects - The Sgr point is an upper limit
99Galactic Winds
- The energy feedback from SNe and stellar winds in
LM03 is - SNe II inject 0.03 Eo (Eo is the initial blast
wave energy of 10(51) erg ) - SNe Ia inject Eo since they explode when the gas
is already hot and with low density (Recchi et
al. 2001) - Stellar winds inject 0.03 Ew (Ew is 10(49) erg)
100Gas Infall and Galaxy Formation
- LM03 assumed that each galaxy forms by infall of
gas of primordial chemical composition - The formation occurs on a short timescale of 0.5
Gyr
101Standard Model of LM03
- Standard Model SF lasts for 8 Gyr, strong wind
removes all the gas - Different SF eff. and wind eff. are tested, from
0.005 to 5 Gyr(-1) for SF and from (6 to 15)
xSF for the winds
102Abundance patterns
- It is evident that the alpha/Fe ratios in
dSphs show a steeper decline with Fe/H than in
the stars in the Milky Way - This is the effect of the time-delay model,
namely of a low SF efficiency coupled with a
strong galactic wind - After the wind SF continues for a while
103Individual galaxies
- Then LM03,04 computed the evolution of 6 dSphs
Carina, Sextan, Draco, Sculptor, Sagittarius and
Ursa Minor - They assumed the SF histories as measured by the
Color-Magnitude diagrams (Mateo, 1998Dolphin
2002 Hernandez et al. 2000 Rizzi et al. 2003)
104Star Formation Historiesin LM03
105SF histories of dSphs (Mateo et al. 1998)
106Individual galaxies
107Dwarf Spheroidals Carina
- Model Lanfranchi Matteucci (04,06)
- SF history from Rizzi et al. 03. Four bursts of 2
Gyr, SF efficiency 0.15 Gyr(-1) lt 1- 2 Gyr(-1)
(S.N.), wind7xSFR - Salpeter IMF
108Predicted C and N in Carina
- Predicted evolution of C and N for Carinas best
model - The continuous line is for secondary N in massive
stars - The dashed line assumes primary N from massive
stars
109Metallicity distribution in Carina
- Data from Koch et al. (2005)
- Best model from Lanfranchi al. (2006)
- This model well reproduces also the alpha/Fe
ratios in Carina
110Dwarf Spheroidals Draco
- Model and data for Draco
- SF history, 1 burst of 4 Gyr, SF efficiency of
0.03 Gyr(-1) - Wind6xSFR
- Salpeter IMF
111Dracos metallicity distribution
- Predicted metallicity distribution for Draco
compared with the predicted metallicity
distribution for the Solar Vicinity
112Dwarf Spheroidals Sextans
- Best Model 1 burst of 8 Gyr
- SF efficiency 0.08 Gyr(-1)
- Wind9xSFR
- Salpeter IMF
113Sextans metallicity distribution
- Predicted metallicity distribution for Sextans by
LM04 - The predicted G-dwarf metallicity distribution
for Solar Vicinity stars is shown for comparison
114Dwarf Spheroidals Ursa Minor
- Best Model 1 burst of 3 Gyr
- SF efficiency 0.2 Gyr(-1)
- Wind10xSFR
- Salpeter IMF
115Ursa Minors metallicity distribution
- Predicted metallicity distribution for Ursa Minor
by LM04 - The predicted G-dwarf metallicity distribution
for the solar vicinity is shown for comparison
116Dwarf spheroidals Sagittarius
- Best modelone long episode of SF of duration 13
Gyr (Dolphin et al 2002) - SF eff. Like the S.N., but very strong wind 9XSFR
117Metallicity distribution in Sagittarius
- Predicted metallicity distribution by LM04 for
Sagittarius continuous line (Salpeter IMF),
dashed line (Scalo IMF) - The predicted G-dwarf metallicity distribution
for the solar vicinity is shown by the dotted line
118Dwarf Spheroidals Sculptor
- Model and data for Sculptor
- SF efficiency 0.05-0.5 Gyr(-1), wind 7 XSFR
- One long SF episide lasting 7 Gyr
- Salpeter IMF
119Sculptors metallicity distribution
- Predicted metallicity distribution in Sculptor
(LM04) - The predicted G-dwarf metallicity distribution
for the solar vicinity is shown for comparison
120s- and r- process elements in dSphs
- Lanfranchi et al. 2006 adopted the
nucleosynthesis prescriptions for the s- and r-
process elements as in the S.N. - They calculated the evolution of the s/Fe and
r/Fe ratios in dSphs - They predicted that s-process elements, which are
produced on long timescales are higher for the
same Fe/H in dSphs
121Model and data for Carina
122Model and data for Draco
123Model and data for Sextans
124Model and data for Sculptor
125Model and data for Sagittarius
126Sagittarius more data
- Best model is continuous line. Dotted lines are
different SF efficiencies - Dashed line is the best model with no wind
- The strong wind compensate the high SF efficiency
- Data from Bonifacio et al. 02,04 Monaco et al.
05 (open squares)
127C and N in Sagittarius predictions
128Other Models for dSphs
- Carigi, Hernandez Gilmore (2002) computed
models for 4 dSphs by assuming SF histories
derived by Hernandez et al. (2000) - They assumed gas infall and computed the gas
thermal energy to study galactic winds - They assumed a Kroupa et al.(1993) IMF
129Carigi et al. (2002)
- They assumed only a sudden wind which devoids the
galaxy from gas instantaneously (LM03 have a
continuous wind) - They predicted a too high metallicity for dSphs
and not the correct slope for alpha/ Fe ratios
130Carigi et als predictions for Ursa Minor
131Model of Ikuta Arimoto (2002)
- They adopted a closed model (no infall, no
outflow) - They suggested a very low SFR such as that of
LM03, 04 - No wind considered. They had to invoke external
mechanisms to stop the SF - They assumed different IMFs
132Ikuta Arimoto (2002)
133Model of Fenner et al. 2006
- Very similar to the model of LM03, 04 with
galactic winds for Sculptor - They suggest 0.05 Gyr(-1) as SF efficiency
- Their galactic wind is not as strong as the winds
of LM03, 04 - They conclude that chemical evolution in dSphs is
inconsistent with SF being truncated after
reionization epoch (z 8)
134Comparison between dSphs and MW
- Blue line and blue data refer to Sculptor
- Red line and red data refer to the Milky Way
- The effect of the time-delay model is to shift
towards left the model for Sculptor with a lower
SF efficiency than in the MW
135Comparison dSph and MW
- Eu/Fe in Sculptor and the MW
- Model and data for Sculptor are in blue
- Model and data for the MW are in red
136Conclusions on dSphs
- By comparing the alpha/Fe ratios in the MW and
dSphs one concludes that they had different SF
histories - The alpha/Fe ratios in dSphs are always lower
than in the MW at the same Fe/H, as a
consequence of the time delay model and strong
galactic wind
137Conclusions on dSphs
- Good agreement both for s/Fe and r/Fe ratios
is obtained . These ratios are generally higher,
for a given Fe/H, than the corresponding ratios
in S.N. - This is again a consequence of the time-delay
model - It is unlikely that the dSphs are the building
blocks of the MW
138Other spirals
139Results for M101 (Chiappini et al. 03)
140Results for M101
141Properties of spirals (Boissier et al. 01)
142Conclusions on Spirals
143Type Ia SN rate
- Time delay distribution for the single-degenerate
scenario (Matteucci Recchi2001 Greggio
Renzini 1983) - Prompt Type Ia SNe are 13 of total
144Bimodal Type Ia SN rates
- Mannucci et al. (05, 06) suggested that 50 of
all Type Ia Sne should explode from 40 to 100
Myr from the beginning of star formation - The other 50 comes from long living systems
145Type Ia SN rates in the solar vicinity
- Mannucci et al. DTD in the two-infall model for
the solar vicinity (dotted line) - Compared with the Type Ia SN rate with the DTD of
Matteucci Recchi
146Predictions for the solar vicinity
- Predictions for O/Fe with the DTD of Mannucci
et al. And for the DTD of Matteucci Recchi - Long-dashed line is the prediction for the
Mannucci DTD
147Predictions for ellipticals
- The dotted line represents the predicted Type Ia
SN rate in an elliptical of 10(11)Msun with the
DTD of Mannucci et al.
148Cosmic SN rates
149Cosmic SN rates
- The DTD of Matteucci Recchi
- Preditions for the cosmic Type Ia SN rate
(including all galaxies) - Predictions of Type Ia SN rate per unit mass
versus color and for radio-galaxies
150Cosmic SN rates
- The DTD of Mannucci
- Predictions for the cosmic Type Ia SN rate
- Predictions for Type Ia SN rate per unit mass
versus B-K color - Predictions of Type Ia SN rate for radio-galaxies
151Conclusions on SN rates
- Cosmic Type Ia SN rates are predicted to be in
good agreement with data except for the highest
redshift point which is very uncertain - Both DTDs give similar results
- Prompt Type Ia SNe should be there
- The main differences between the two DTDs are
expected at very high redshift
152THANKS EVA BEN!
153N132D in LMC oxygen rich SN remnant
SII red, OIII green, OI blue
154How to search
SN 1998dh
- Compare images taken at different epochs
- few days lt time interval lt 1-2 month
- 14 lt limiting magnitude lt 24
- 0.01 lt target redshift lt 1
- 5 arcmin lt field of view lt 1 deg
- B-V lt band lt R-I
155SN search
156 SN distribution in galactic
coordinates
157SN rate with redshift
Madau, Della Valle Panagia 1998 On the
evolution of the cosmic supernova rate Sadat et
al. 1998 AA 331, L69 Cosmic star formation and
Type Ia/II supernova rates at high Z Yungelson
Livio 2000 ApJ 528, 108 Supernova Rates A
Cosmic History Kobayashi et al. 2000 ApJ 539, 26
The History of the Cosmic Supernova Rate Derived
from the Evolution of the Host Galaxies Sullivan
et al. 2000 MNRAS 319, 549 A strategy for finding
gravitationally lensed distant supernovae Dahlèn
Fransson 1999 AA 350, 349 Rates and redshift
distributions of high-z supernovae Calura
Matteucci 2003 ApJ 596, 734
158Astrophysics massive star evolution
GRBs
NS
BH
Zampieri et al. (2003) MNRAS 338, 711