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A Large Sample of Extremely Metal-poor Galaxies at $z<1$ Identified from the DESI Early Data

Authors :
Zou, Hu
Sui, Jipeng
Saintonge, Amélie
Scholte, Dirk
Moustakas, John
Siudek, Malgorzata
Dey, Arjun
Juneau, Stephanie
Guo, Weijian
Canning, Rebecca
Aguilar, J.
Ahlen, S.
Brooks, D.
Claybaugh, T.
Dawson, K.
de la Macorra, A.
Doel, P.
Forero-Romero, J. E.
Gontcho, S. Gontcho A
Honscheid, K.
Landriau, M.
Guillou, L. Le
Manera, M.
Meisner, A.
Miquel, R.
Nie, Jundan
Poppett, C.
Rezaie, M.
Rossi, G.
Sanchez, E.
Schubnell, M.
Seo, H.
Tarle, G.
Zhou, Zhimin
Zou, Siwei
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Extremely metal-poor galaxies (XMPGs) at relatively low redshift are excellent laboratories for studying galaxy formation and evolution in the early universe. Much effort has been spent on identifying them from large-scale spectroscopic surveys or spectroscopic follow-up observations. Previous work has identified a few hundred XMPGs. In this work, we obtain a large sample of 223 XMPGs at $z&lt;1$ from the early data of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). The oxygen abundance is determined using the direct $T_{\rm e}$ method based on the detection of the [O III]$\lambda$4363 line. The sample includes 95 confirmed XMPGs based on the oxygen abundance uncertainty; remaining 128 galaxies are regarded as XMPG candidates. These XMPGs are only 0.01% of the total DESI observed galaxies. Their coordinates and other proprieties are provided in the paper. The most XMPG has an oxygen abundance of $\sim 1/34 Z_{\odot}$, stellar mass of about $1.5\times10^7 M_{\odot}$ and star formation rate of 0.22 $M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$. The two most XMPGs present distinct morphologies suggesting different formation mechanisms. The local environmental investigation shows that XMPGs preferentially reside in relatively low-density regions. Many of them fall below the stellar mass-metallicity relations (MZRs) of normal star-forming galaxies. From a comparison of the MZR with theoretical simulations, it appears that XMPGs are good analogs to high-redshift star-forming galaxies. The nature of these XMPG populations will be further investigated in detail with larger and more complete samples from the on-going DESI survey.&lt;br /&gt;Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2312.00300
Document Type :
Working Paper