Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Abundances in the Galaxy: field stars
- Part II Abundances in the Galaxy: Galactic stars in clusters, bulges and the centre
- Part III Observations – abundances in extragalactic contexts
- Part IV Stellar populations and mass functions
- Part V Physical processes at high metallicity
- Part VI Formation and evolution of metal-rich stars and stellar yields
- Part VII Chemical and photometric evolution beyond Solar metallicity
- 43 Models of the Solar vicinity: the metal-rich stage
- 44 Chemical-evolution models of ellipticals and bulges
- 45 Chemical evolution of the Galactic bulge
- 46 How do galaxies become metal-rich? An examination of the yield problem
- 47 Abundance patterns: thick and thin disks
- 48 Formation and evolution of the Galactic bulge: constraints from stellar abundances
49 - Summary
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Abundances in the Galaxy: field stars
- Part II Abundances in the Galaxy: Galactic stars in clusters, bulges and the centre
- Part III Observations – abundances in extragalactic contexts
- Part IV Stellar populations and mass functions
- Part V Physical processes at high metallicity
- Part VI Formation and evolution of metal-rich stars and stellar yields
- Part VII Chemical and photometric evolution beyond Solar metallicity
- 43 Models of the Solar vicinity: the metal-rich stage
- 44 Chemical-evolution models of ellipticals and bulges
- 45 Chemical evolution of the Galactic bulge
- 46 How do galaxies become metal-rich? An examination of the yield problem
- 47 Abundance patterns: thick and thin disks
- 48 Formation and evolution of the Galactic bulge: constraints from stellar abundances
Summary
Topics figuring in this conference include limits to high metallicity, metallicity characteristics of stellar populations, [M/Fe] in bulges and discs, effects of metallicity on star formation and the initial mass function, its relation to planet formation, effects of high metallicity on stellar evolution, yields and galactic chemical evolution, metal-rich H ii regions and metallicities at high redshift.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Metal-Rich Universe , pp. 465 - 470Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008