The Evolution of NGC 7465 as Revealed by its Molecular Gas Properties
(2021)
The Evolution of NGC 7465 as Revealed by Its Molecular Gas Properties
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 909:2 (2021) ARTN 98
WISDOM project – VI. Exploring the relation between supermassive black hole mass and galaxy rotation with molecular gas
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 500:2 (2020) 1933-1952
Abstract:
The Evolution of Gas-Phase Metallicity and Resolved Abundances in Star-forming Galaxies at z ≈ 0.6 – 1.8
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) (2020)
Abstract:
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>We present an analysis of the chemical abundance properties of ≈650 star-forming galaxies at z ≈ 0.6 – 1.8. Using integral-field observations from the K - band Multi-Object Spectrograph (KMOS), we quantify the [N ii]/Hα emission-line ratio, a proxy for the gas-phase Oxygen abundance within the interstellar medium. We define the stellar mass – metallicity relation at z ≈ 0.6 – 1.0 and z ≈ 1.2 – 1.8 and analyse the correlation between the scatter in the relation and fundamental galaxy properties (e.g. Hα star-formation rate, Hα specific star-formation rate, rotation dominance, stellar continuum half-light radius and Hubble-type morphology). We find that for a given stellar mass, more highly star-forming, larger and irregular galaxies have lower gas-phase metallicities, which may be attributable to their lower surface mass densities and the higher gas fractions of irregular systems. We measure the radial dependence of gas-phase metallicity in the galaxies, establishing a median, beam smearing-corrected, metallicity gradient of ΔZ/ΔR= 0.002 ± 0.004 dex kpc−1, indicating on average there is no significant dependence on radius. The metallicity gradient of a galaxy is independent of its rest-frame optical morphology, whilst correlating with its stellar mass and specific star-formation rate, in agreement with an inside-out model of galaxy evolution, as well as its rotation dominance. We quantify the evolution of metallicity gradients, comparing the distribution of ΔZ/ΔR in our sample with numerical simulations and observations at z ≈ 0 – 3. Galaxies in our sample exhibit flatter metallicity gradients than local star-forming galaxies, in agreement with numerical models in which stellar feedback plays a crucial role redistributing metals.</jats:p>The Evolution of Gas-Phase Metallicity and Resolved Abundances in Star-forming Galaxies at $z \approx0.6-1.8$
(2020)