Back to Search Start Over

The stellar mass versus stellar metallicity relation of star-forming galaxies at $1.6\le z\le3.0$ and implications for the evolution of the $\alpha$-enhancement

Authors :
Kashino, Daichi
Lilly, Simon J.
Renzini, Alvio
Daddi, Emanuele
Zamorani, Giovanni
Silverman, John D.
Ilbert, Olivier
Peng, Yingjie
Mainieri, Vincenzo
Bardelli, Sandro
Zucca, Elena
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S.
Sanders, David B.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We measure the relationship between stellar mass and stellar metallicity, the stellar mass--metallicity relation (MZR), for 1336 star-forming galaxies at $1.6\le z\le3.0$ (<z>=2.2) using rest-frame far-ultraviolet spectra from the zCOSMOS-deep survey. High signal-to-noise composite spectra containing stellar absorption features are fit with population synthesis model spectra of a range of metallicity. We find stellar metallicities, which mostly reflect iron abundances, scaling as $(Z_{Fe,\ast}/Z_{Fe,\odot})=-(0.81\pm0.01)+(0.32+0.03)\log(M_\ast/10^{10}M_\odot)$ across the mass range of $10^9\lesssim M_\ast/M_\odot\lesssim10^{11}$, being $\approx6\times$ lower than seen locally at the same masses. The instantaneous oxygen-to-iron ratio ($\alpha$-enhancement) inferred using the gas-phase oxygen MZRs, is on average found to be [O/Fe]$\approx0.47$, being higher than the local [O/Fe]$\approx0$. The observed changes in [O/Fe] and [Fe/H] are reproduced in simple flow-through gas-regulator models with steady star-formation histories (SFHs) that follow the evolving main sequence. Our models show that the [O/Fe] is determined almost entirely by the instantaneous specific star formation rate alone while being independent of the SFHs, mass, and the gas-regulation characteristics of the systems. We find that the locations of $\sim10^{10}M_\odot$ galaxies at z~2 in the [O/Fe]--metallicity planes are in remarkable agreement with the sequence of low-metallicity thick-disk stars in our Galaxy. This manifests a beautiful concordance between the results of Galactic archaeology and observations of high-redshift Milky Way progenitors. However, there remains a question of how and when the old metal-rich, low-$\alpha$/Fe stars seen in the bulge had formed by z~2 because such a stellar population is not seen in our data and difficult to explain in the context of our models.<br />Comment: Submitted to ApJ; 30 pages, 20 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2109.06044
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac399e