Star Formation History and Stellar Metallicity Distribution in a Cold Dark Matter Universe

Abstract

We study star formation history and stellar metallicity distribution in galaxies in a Lambda cold dark matter universe using a hydrodynamic cosmological simulation. Our model predicts star formation rate declining in time exponentially from an early epoch to the present with the time-scale of 6 Gyr, which is consistent with the empirical Madau plot with modest dust obscuration. Star formation in L* galaxies continues intermittently to the present also with an exponentially declining rate of a similar time-scale, whereas in small galaxies star formation ceases at an early epoch. The mean age of the extant stars decreases only slowly with increasing redshift, and exceeds 1 Gyr at z=3. Normal galaxies contain stars with a wide range of metallicity and age: stars formed at z<1 have metallicity of 0.1-1.0 Zsun, while old stars take a wide range of values from 10-6 Zsun to 3.0 Zsun. The mean metallicity of normal galaxies is in the range 0.1-1.0 Zsun. Dwarf galaxies that contain only old stars have a wide range of mean metallicity (10-4-1.0 Zsun), but on average they are metal deficient compared with normal galaxies.

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