Abstract
In this review I first outline some interesting ideas in chemical evolution, necessary for understanding the evolution of galaxies from measured elemental abundance ratios. I then discuss abundance results from studies of stars in Local Group dwarf galaxies and the globular cluster Omega Cen. Finally, I present a qualitative scenario of prolonged chemical evolution in a leaky box that can explain the observed abundance ratios trends in these dwarf systems. Unfortunately, space limitations prevent a comprehensive discussion of the vast field of observational chemical evolution, so I have limited this paper to a few interesting subtopics. I have completely omitted the Galactic bulge; this may be as well, because there is some disagreement over the measured abundance ratios, except for [O/Fe] which follows the thick disk trend. © Copyright owned by the author(s).
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CITATION STYLE
McWilliam, A. (2010). Galactic chemical evolution: The observational side. In Proceedings of Science. Proceedings of Science (PoS). https://doi.org/10.22323/1.100.0008
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