Abstract

It is frequently debated in literature whether a standard Initial Mass Function (IMF) - meaning an IMF of the kind usually adopted to explain the chemical evolution in the local Solar Neighbourhood - can account for the observed metal enrichment and Iron Mass-to-Light Ratio in clusters of galaxies. We address this problem by means of straightforward estimates that should hold independently of the details of chemical evolution models. It is crucial to compute self-consistently the amount of mass and metals locked-up in stars, by accounting for the stellar mass-to-light ratio predicted by a given IMF. It becomes then clear that a standard Solar Neighbourhood IMF cannot provide enough metals to account for the observed chemical properties in clusters: clusters of galaxies and the local environment must be characterized by different IMFs. Alternatively, if we require the IMF to be universal, in order to explain clusters such an IMF must be much more efficient in metal production than usually estimated for the Solar Vicinity. In this case, substantial loss of metals is required from the Solar Neighbourhood and from disc galaxies in general. This non-standard scenario for the local chemical evolution would challenge our present understanding of the Milky Way and of disc galaxy formation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call