The role of mass loss in chemodynamical evolution of galaxies

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Abstract

Thanks to the long-term collaborations between nuclear and astrophysics, we have good understanding on the origin of elements in the universe, except for the elements around Ti and some neutron-capture elements. From the comparison between observations of nearby stars and Galactic chemical evolution models, a rapid neutron-capture process associated with core-collapse supernovae is required. The production of C, N, F and some minor isotopes depends on the rotation of massive stars, and the observations of distant galaxies with ALMA indicate rapid cosmic enrichment. It might be hard to find very metal-poor or Population III (and dust-free) galaxies at very high redshifts even with JWST.

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Kobayashi, C. (2020). The role of mass loss in chemodynamical evolution of galaxies. In Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (Vol. 16, pp. 63–82). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921322001132

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