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The imprint of clump formation at high redshift. II. The chemistry of the bulge

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arxiv 2303.08265 v1 pith:QFZLZYYC submitted 2023-03-14 astro-ph.GA

The imprint of clump formation at high redshift. II. The chemistry of the bulge

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords bulgechemistryformationthicktrackclumpsclumpydisks
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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In Paper I we showed that clumps in high-redshift galaxies, having a high star formation rate density (\Sigma_SFR), produce disks with two tracks in the [Fe/H]-[\alpha/Fe] chemical space, similar to that of the Milky Way's (MW's) thin + thick disks. Here we investigate the effect of clumps on the bulge's chemistry. The chemistry of the MW's bulge is comprised of a single track with two density peaks separated by a trough. We show that the bulge chemistry of an N-body + smoothed particle hydrodynamics clumpy simulation also has a single track. Star formation within the bulge is itself in the high-\Sigma_SFR clumpy mode, which ensures that the bulge's chemical track follows that of the thick disk at low [Fe/H] and then extends to high [Fe/H], where it peaks. The peak at low metallicity instead is comprised of a mixture of in-situ stars and stars accreted via clumps. As a result, the trough between the peaks occurs at the end of the thick disk track. We find that the high-metallicity peak dominates near the mid-plane and declines in relative importance with height, as in the MW. The bulge is already rapidly rotating by the end of the clump epoch, with higher rotation at low [\alpha/Fe]. Thus clumpy star formation is able to simultaneously explain the chemodynamic trends of the MW's bulge, thin + thick disks and the Splash.

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  1. Star-forming clump detection in nearby galaxies using Faster R-CNN and $ugrizy$ imaging data from CLAUDS and HSC-SSP

    astro-ph.IM 2026-07 conditional novelty 6.5

    A multi-band Faster R-CNN with Zoobot backbone detects star-forming clumps in low-z galaxies at ≥0.9 completeness and ≥0.8 purity on simulated injections, yielding ~1.5M candidates.