Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2005-06-04
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 361 (2005) 1216-1226
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 13 pages mpeg simulations available at http://www.MPA-Garching.MPG.DE/~chiaki/movie.html
Scientific paper
10.1111/j.1365-2966.2005.09248.x
We simulate the formation and chemodynamical evolution of 128 elliptical galaxies using a GRAPE-SPH code that includes various physical processes that are associated with the formation of stellar systems: radiative cooling, star formation, feedback from Type II and Ia supernovae and stellar winds, and chemical enrichment. We find that the star formation timescale controls when and where stars form in the contracting gas cloud, determines the effective radius at given mass, and is constrained by observation to be ten times longer than the local dynamical timescale. We succeed in reproducing the observed global scaling relations under our CDM-based scenario, e.g., the Faber-Jackson relation, the Kormendy relation, and the fundamental plane. An intrinsic scatter exists along the fundamental plane, and the origin of this scatter lies in differences in merging history. Galaxies that undergo major merger events tend to have larger effective radii and fainter surface brightnesses, which result in larger masses, smaller surface brightnesses, and larger mass-to-light ratios. We can also reproduce the observed colour-magnitude and mass-metallicity relations, although the scatter is larger than observed. The scatter arises because feedback is not very effective and star formation does not terminate completely in our simulations. ~25% of accreted baryons are blown away in the simulations, independent of the assumed star formation timescale and initial mass function. Most heavy elements end up locked into stars in the galaxy. The ejected metal fraction depends only on the star formation timescale, and is ~2% even to rapid star formation.
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