The Chemical Evolution of the Galaxy with Variable Initial Mass Functions

Abstract
In this work we explore the effects on the chemical evolution of the Galaxy of adopting initial mass functions (IMFs) variable in time. To this end, we adopt a chemical evolution model that assumes two main infall episodes for the formation of the Galaxy that has proved to be successful in reproducing the majority of the observational constraints, at least for the case of a constant IMF. Different variable IMFs are tested with this model, all assuming that massive stars are preferentially formed in ambients of low metallicity. This implies that massive stars are formed preferentially at early times and at large Galactocentric distances. Our numerical results have shown that none of the variable IMFs proposed so far are able to reproduce all the relevant observational constraints in the Galaxy, and that a constant IMF still better reproduces the observations. In particular, variable IMFs of the kind explored here are unable to reproduce the observed abundance gradients, even allowing for changes in other chemical evolution model parameters, such as, for instance, the star formation rate. As a consequence, we conclude that the G-dwarf metallicity distribution is best explained by infall with a large timescale and a constant IMF, since it is possible to find variable IMFs of the kind studied here reproducing the G-dwarf metallicity, but this worsens the agreement with other observational constraints.
All Related Versions

This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit: