Back to Search Start Over

The KLEVER Survey: Spatially resolved metallicity maps and gradients in a sample of 1.2 < z < 2.5 lensed galaxies

Authors :
Curti, Mirko
Maiolino, Roberto
Cirasuolo, Michele
Mannucci, Filippo
Williams, Rebecca J.
Auger, Matt
Mercurio, Amata
Hayden-Pawson, Connor
Cresci, Giovanni
Marconi, Alessandro
Belfiore, Francesco
Cappellari, Michele
Cicone, Claudia
Cullen, Fergus
Meneghetti, Massimo
Ota, Kazuaki
Peng, Yingjie
Pettini, Max
Swinbank, Mark
Troncoso, Paulina
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We present near-infrared observations of 42 gravitationally lensed galaxies obtained in the framework of the KMOS Lensed Emission Lines and VElocity Review (KLEVER) Survey, a program aimed at investigating the spatially resolved properties of the ionised gas in 1.2&lt;z&lt;2.5 galaxies by means of a full coverage of the YJ, H and K near-infrared bands. Detailed metallicity maps and gradients are derived for a sub-sample of 28 galaxies from reconstructed source plane emission line maps, exploiting the variety of different emission line diagnostics provided by the broad wavelength coverage of the survey. About 85% of these galaxies are characterised by metallicity gradients shallower than 0.05 dex/kpc and 89% are consistent with flat slope within 3$\sigma$ (67% within 1$\sigma$), suggesting a mild evolution with cosmic time. In the context of cosmological simulations and chemical evolution models, the presence of efficient feedback mechanisms and/or extended star formation profiles on top of the classical &quot;inside-out&quot; scenario of mass assembly is generally required to reproduce the observed flatness of the metallicity gradients beyond z$\sim$1 . Three galaxies with significantly (&gt; 3$\sigma$) &quot;inverted&quot; gradients are also found, showing an anti-correlation between metallicity and star formation rate density on local scales, possibly suggesting recent episodes of pristine gas accretion or strong radial flows in place. Nevertheless, the individual metallicity maps are characterised by a variety of different morphologies, with flat radial gradients sometimes hiding non-axisymmetric variations on kpc scales which are washed out by azimuthal averages, especially in interacting systems or in those undergoing local episodes of recent star formation.&lt;br /&gt;Comment: Main text: 23 pages, 11 figures. Appendix: 12 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication on MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1910.13451
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz3379