Register      Login
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia Society
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Mass to Light Ratio, Initial Mass Function, and Chemical Evolution in Disk Galaxies

L. Portinari, J. Sommer-Larsen and R. Tantalo

Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia 21(2) 144 - 147
Published: 11 June 2004

Abstract

Cosmological simulations of disk galaxy formation, when compared to the observed Tully–Fisher relation, suggest a low mass to light (M/L) ratio for the stellar component in spirals. We show that a number of 'bottom-light' initial mass functions (IMFs) suggested independently in the literature, do imply M/L ratios as low as required, at least for late type spirals (Sbc–Sc). However the typical M/L ratio, and correspondingly the zero point of the Tully–Fisher relation, is expected to vary considerably with Hubble type.

Bottom-light IMFs tend to have a metal production in excess of what is typically estimated for spiral galaxies. Suitable tuning of the IMF slope and mass limits, post-supernova fallback of metals onto black holes or metal outflows must then be invoked, to reproduce the observed chemical properties of disk galaxies.

Keywords: galaxies: spiral — galaxies: evolution — stars: initial mass function

https://doi.org/10.1071/AS04019

© ASA 2004

PDF (205 KB) Export Citation Cited By (2)

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn Share via Email

View Dimensions