Top-heavy stellar mass distribution in galactic nuclei inferred from the universally high abundance ratio of [Fe/Mg]
Mar 29, 202211 pages
Published in:
- Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 512 (2022) 2, 2573-2583
- Published: Mar 29, 2022
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Abstract: (Oxford University Press)
Recent observations of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) have shown a high Fe ii/Mg ii line-flux ratio in their broad-line regions, nearly independent of redshift up to z ≳ 6. The high flux ratio requires rapid production of iron in galactic nuclei to reach an abundance ratio of [Fe/Mg] ≳ 0.2 as high as those observed in matured galaxies in the local universe. We propose a possible explanation of rapid iron enrichment in AGNs by massive star formation that follows a top-heavy initial mass function (IMF) with a power-law index of Γ larger than the canonical value of Γ = −2.35 for a Salpeter IMF. Taking into account metal production channels from different types of SNe, we find that the high value of [Fe/Mg] ≳ 0.2 requires the IMF to be characterized with Γ ≳ −1 (Γ ≳ 0) and a high-mass cutoff at M_max ≃ 100–150 M_⊙ (M_max ≳ 250 M_⊙). Given the conditions, core-collapse SNe with M_* ≳ 70 M_⊙ and pair-instability SNe give a major contribution for iron enrichment. Such top-heavy stellar IMFs would be a natural consequence from mass growth of stars formed in dense AGN discs under Bondi-like gas accretion that is regulated by feedback at M_* ≳ 10 M_⊙. The massive stellar population formed in AGN discs also leave stellar-mass black hole remnants, whose mergers associated with gravitational-wave emission account for at most 10 per cent of the merger rate inferred from LIGO/Virgo observations to simultaneously explain the high [Fe/Mg] ratio with metal ejection.- stars: luminosity function, mass function
- supernovae: general
- galaxies: abundances
- galaxies: nuclei
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