397 research outputs found
Dependence of Nebular Heavy-Element Abundance on H I Content for Spiral Galaxies
We analyze the galactic H I content and nebular log(O/H) for 60 spiral
galaxies in the Moustakas et al. (2006) spectral catalog. After correcting for
the mass-metallicity relationship, we show that the spirals in cluster
environments show a positive correlation for log(O/H) on DEF, the galactic H I
deficiency parameter, extending the results of previous analyses of the Virgo
and Pegasus I clusters. Additionally, we show for the first time that galaxies
in the field obey a similar dependence. The observed relationship between H I
deficiency and galactic metallicity resembles similar trends shown by
cosmological simulations of galaxy formation including inflows and outflows.
These results indicate the previously observed metallicity-DEF correlation has
a more universal interpretation than simply a cluster's effects on its member
galaxies. Rather, we observe in all environments the stochastic effects of
metal-poor infall as minor mergers and accretion help to build giant spirals.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
A Characteristic Mass Scale in the Mass-Metallicity Relation of Galaxies
We study the shape of the gas-phase mass-metallicity relation (MZR) of a
combined sample of present-day dwarf and high-mass star-forming galaxies using
IZI, a Bayesian formalism for measuring chemical abundances presented in Blanc
et al. 2015. We observe a characteristic stellar mass scale at M, above which the ISM undergoes a sharp increase in its
level of chemical enrichment. In the M range the MZR
follows a shallow power-law () with slope
. At approaching M the MZR
steepens significantly, showing a slope of in the
M range, and a flattening towards a constant
metallicity at higher stellar masses. This behavior is qualitatively different
from results in the literature that show a single power-law MZR towards the low
mass end. We thoroughly explore systematic uncertainties in our measurement,
and show that the shape of the MZR is not induced by sample selection, aperture
effects, a changing N/O abundance, the adopted methodology used to construct
the MZR, secondary dependencies on star formation activity, nor diffuse ionized
gas (DIG) contamination, but rather on differences in the method used to
measure abundances. High resolution hydrodynamical simulations can
qualitatively reproduce our result, and suggest a transition in the ability of
galaxies to retain their metals for stellar masses above this threshold. The
MZR characteristic mass scale also coincides with a transition in the scale
height and clumpiness of cold gas disks, and a typical gas fraction below which
the efficiency of star formation feedback for driving outflows is expected to
decrease sharply.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
IZI: Inferring the gas phase metallicity (Z) and ionization parameter (q) of ionized nebulae using bayesian statistics
We present a new method for inferring the metallicity (Z) and ionization parameter (q) of H ii regions and star-forming galaxies using strong nebular emission lines (SELs). We use Bayesian inference to derive the joint and marginalized posterior probability density functions for Z and q given a set of observed line fluxes and an input photoionization model. Our approach allows the use of arbitrary sets of SELs and the inclusion of flux upper limits. The method provides a self-consistent way of determining the physical conditions of ionized nebulae that is not tied to the arbitrary choice of a particular SEL diagnostic and uses all the available information. Unlike theoretically calibrated SEL diagnostics, the method is flexible and not tied to a particular photoionization model. We describe our algorithm, validate it against other methods, and present a tool that implements it called IZI. Using a sample of nearby extragalactic H ii regions, we assess the performance of commonly used SEL abundance diagnostics. We also use a sample of 22 local H ii regions having both direct and recombination line (RL) oxygen abundance measurements in the literature to study discrepancies in the abundance scale between different methods. We find that oxygen abundances derived through Bayesian inference using currently available photoionization models in the literature can be in good (∼30%) agreement with RL abundances, although some models perform significantly better than others. We also confirm that abundances measured using the direct method are typically ∼0.2 dex lower than both RL and photoionization-model-based abundances
Attenuation modified by DIG and dust as seen in M31
The spatial distribution of dust in galaxies affects the global attenuation,
and hence inferred properties, of galaxies. We trace the spatial distribution
of dust in five fields (at 0.6-0.9 kpc scale) of M31 by comparing optical
attenuation with the total dust mass distribution. We measure the attenuation
from the Balmer decrement using Integral Field Spectroscopy and the dust mass
from Herschel far-IR observations. Our results show that M31's dust attenuation
closely follows a foreground screen model, contrary to what was previously
found in other nearby galaxies. By smoothing the M31 data we find that spatial
resolution is not the cause for this difference. Based on the emission line
ratios and two simple models, we conclude that previous models of dust/gas
geometry need to include a weakly or non-attenuated diffuse ionized gas (DIG)
component. Due to the variation of dust and DIG scale heights with galactic
radius, we conclude that different locations in galaxies will have different
vertical distributions of gas and dust and therefore different measured
attenuation. The difference between our result in M31 with that found in other
nearby galaxies can be explained by our fields in M31 lying at larger galactic
radii than the previous studies that focused on the centres of galaxies.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures, ApJ accepted and in pres
Interrogating Seyferts with NebulaBayes: Spatially probing the narrow-line region radiation fields and chemical abundances
NebulaBayes is a new Bayesian code that implements a general method of
comparing observed emission-line fluxes to photoionization model grids. The
code enables us to extract robust, spatially resolved measurements of
abundances in the extended narrow line regions (ENLRs) produced by Active
Galactic Nuclei (AGN). We observe near-constant ionization parameters but
steeply radially-declining pressures, which together imply that radiation
pressure regulates the ENLR density structure on large scales. Our sample
includes four `pure Seyfert' galaxies from the S7 survey that have extensive
ENLRs. NGC2992 shows steep metallicity gradients from the nucleus into the
ionization cones. An {\it inverse} metallicity gradient is observed in
ESO138-G01, which we attribute to a recent gas inflow or minor merger. A
uniformly high metallicity and hard ionizing continuum are inferred across the
ENLR of Mrk573. Our analysis of IC5063 is likely affected by contamination from
shock excitation, which appears to soften the inferred ionizing spectrum. The
peak of the ionizing continuum E_peak is determined by the nuclear spectrum and
the absorbing column between the nucleus and the ionized nebula. We cannot
separate variation in this intrinsic E_peak from the effects of shock or HII
region contamination, but E_peak measurements nevertheless give insights into
ENLR excitation. We demonstrate the general applicability of NebulaBayes by
analyzing a nuclear spectrum from the non-active galaxy NGC4691 using a HII
region grid. The NLR and HII region model grids are provided with NebulaBayes
for use by the astronomical community.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 29 pages with 10 figures and 3
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