A MODEL FOR THE CHEMICAL EVOLUTION OF THE GALAXY WITH REFUSES
H. J. Rocha-Pinto, L. I. Arany-Prado, W. J. Maciel
Astrophys. Space Sci. 211, 241-251 (1994)
A model is presented for the chemical evolution of the solar neighbourhood
which takes into account three families of galactic objects, according
to their condensation states: stars, refuses and gas. Stars are defined
as all condensed objects with masses greater than or equal to the
minimum mass which ignites hydrogen and which will give rise to an
evolutionary track on the HR diagram to the left of the Hayashi's limit;
refuses include the remnants, which are compact objects resulting from
stellar deaths, and the residues, which have masses not large enough
to ignite hydrogen; gas is defined as the mass which can be condensed
to form stars and/or residues. We have developed equations for the mass
evolution of each family, and have studied the gas metallicity distribution
within the framework of the instantaneous recycling approximation, adopting
different initial conditions. In order to constrain the model parameters,
we have also used preliminary evaluations of comet cloud masses to
investigate the role of the residues as sinks of heavy elements in the
Galaxy.
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