Diffusion of elements in the interstellar medium in early-type galaxies


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Abstract

The role of diffusion in the redistribution of elements in the hot interstellar medium of earlytype galaxies is considered. It is well known that gravitational sedimentation can affect significantly the abundances of helium and heavy elements in the hot intergalactic gas of massive galaxy clusters. The universal temperature profile in cool-core clusters and the theoretical mass–temperature relation suggest that the maximum effect of sedimentation must take place in the most massive virialized objects in the Universe. However, observational data from the Chandra and XMM-Newton observatories demonstrate more complex scaling relations between the masses of early-type galaxies and other parameters, such as the mass fraction and temperature of the interstellar gas. An important fact is that the radial temperature profile can have both falling and rising patterns. We have calculated the diffusion based on the observed gas density and temperature distributions for 13 early-type galaxies that have different envelope types and cover a wide range of X-ray luminosities. To estimate the maximum effect of sedimentation and thermal diffusion, we have solved the full set of Burgers equations for a non-magnetized interstellar plasma. The results obtained demonstrate a considerable increase of the He/H ratio within one effective radius for all galaxies of our sample. For galaxies with a falling or constant temperature profile the average increase of the helium abundance is 60% in one billion years of diffusion. The revealed effect can introduce a significant bias into the metal abundance estimate based on X-ray spectroscopy and can affect the evolution of stars that could be formed from a gas with a high helium abundance.

About the authors

P. S. Medvedev

Space Research Institute

Author for correspondence.
Email: tomedvedev@iki.rssi.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Profsoyuznaya 84/32, Moscow, 117997

S. Yu. Sazonov

Space Research Institute

Email: tomedvedev@iki.rssi.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Profsoyuznaya 84/32, Moscow, 117997

M. R. Gilfanov

Max Planck Institut für Astrophysik; Space Research Institute

Email: tomedvedev@iki.rssi.ru
Germany, Karl-Schwarzschild-Str. 1, Postfach 1317, Garching, D-85741; ul. Profsoyuznaya 84/32, Moscow, 117997

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