TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring chemical homogeneity in dwarf galaxies
T2 - A VLT-MUSE study of JKB 18
AU - James, Bethan L.
AU - Kumari, Nimisha
AU - Emerick, Andrew
AU - Koposov, Sergey E.
AU - McQuinn, Kristen B.W.
AU - Stark, Daniel P.
AU - Belokurov, Vasily
AU - Maiolino, Roberto
N1 - Funding Information:
This study is based on observations collected at the European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern hemisphere under ESO programme(s) 096.B-0212(A). We are grateful to the European Southern Observatory time assignment committee, who awarded time to this programme and to the staff astronomers at Paranal, who conducted the observations. We thank Peter Zeidler for his invaluable assistance in the MUSE data reduction and for allowing us access to MUSEPACK during its development phase, and Roger Wesson for his advice on optimizing ALFA for our line-fitting needs. We are sincerely grateful to Evan Skillman for discussions concerning chemical inhomogeneities, to Danielle Berg for the assessment of anomalously low metallicity measurements, and Matthew Auger for his assistance with several of the figures presented here. The authors would also like thank the anonymous referee, whose insightful comments helped greatly improve this manuscript. BLJ thanks support from the European Space Agency (ESA). NK thanks the Schlumberger Foundation for the fellowship supporting her postdoctoral work at the University of Cambridge. SK is partially supported by NSF grants AST- 1813881, AST-1909584 and Heising-Simon’s foundation grant 2018-1030.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.
PY - 2020/5/14
Y1 - 2020/5/14
N2 - Deciphering the distribution of metals throughout galaxies is fundamental in our understanding of galaxy evolution. Nearby, low-metallicity, star-forming dwarf galaxies, in particular, can offer detailed insight into the metal-dependent processes that may have occurred within galaxies in the early Universe. Here, we present VLT/MUSE observations of one such system, JKB 18, a blue diffuse dwarf galaxy with a metallicity of only 12 + log(O/H)=7.6 ± 0.2 (∼0.08 Z⊠). Using high spatial resolution integral-field spectroscopy of the entire system, we calculate chemical abundances for individual H ii regions using the direct method and derive oxygen abundance maps using strong-line metallicity diagnostics. With large-scale dispersions in O/H, N/H, and N/O of ∼0.5-0.6 dex and regions harbouring chemical abundances outside this 1σ distribution, we deem JKB 18 to be chemically inhomogeneous. We explore this finding in the context of other chemically inhomogeneous dwarf galaxies and conclude that neither the accretion of metal-poor gas, short mixing time-scales or self-enrichment from Wolf-Rayet stars are accountable. Using a galaxy-scale, multiphase, hydrodynamical simulation of a low-mass dwarf galaxy, we find that chemical inhomogeneities of this level may be attributable to the removal of gas via supernovae and the specific timing of the observations with respect to star formation activity. This study not only draws attention to the fact that dwarf galaxies can be chemically inhomogeneous, but also that the methods used in the assessment of this characteristic can be subject to bias.
AB - Deciphering the distribution of metals throughout galaxies is fundamental in our understanding of galaxy evolution. Nearby, low-metallicity, star-forming dwarf galaxies, in particular, can offer detailed insight into the metal-dependent processes that may have occurred within galaxies in the early Universe. Here, we present VLT/MUSE observations of one such system, JKB 18, a blue diffuse dwarf galaxy with a metallicity of only 12 + log(O/H)=7.6 ± 0.2 (∼0.08 Z⊠). Using high spatial resolution integral-field spectroscopy of the entire system, we calculate chemical abundances for individual H ii regions using the direct method and derive oxygen abundance maps using strong-line metallicity diagnostics. With large-scale dispersions in O/H, N/H, and N/O of ∼0.5-0.6 dex and regions harbouring chemical abundances outside this 1σ distribution, we deem JKB 18 to be chemically inhomogeneous. We explore this finding in the context of other chemically inhomogeneous dwarf galaxies and conclude that neither the accretion of metal-poor gas, short mixing time-scales or self-enrichment from Wolf-Rayet stars are accountable. Using a galaxy-scale, multiphase, hydrodynamical simulation of a low-mass dwarf galaxy, we find that chemical inhomogeneities of this level may be attributable to the removal of gas via supernovae and the specific timing of the observations with respect to star formation activity. This study not only draws attention to the fact that dwarf galaxies can be chemically inhomogeneous, but also that the methods used in the assessment of this characteristic can be subject to bias.
KW - galaxies: Abundances
KW - galaxies: dwarf
KW - galaxies: evolution
KW - galaxies: irregular
KW - galaxies: star formation
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U2 - 10.1093/mnras/staa1280
DO - 10.1093/mnras/staa1280
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85091963156
SN - 0035-8711
VL - 495
SP - 2564
EP - 2581
JO - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
IS - 3
ER -