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CLASSY V: The impact of aperture effects on the inferred nebular properties of local star-forming galaxies

Authors :
Arellano-Córdova, Karla Z.
Mingozzi, Matilde
Berg, Danielle A.
James, Bethan L.
Rogers, Noah. S. J.
Aloisi, Alessandra
Amorín, Ricardo O.
Brinchmann, Jarle
Charlot, Stéphane
Chisholm, John
Heckman, Timothy
Dubón, Stefany Fabian
Hayes, Matthew
Hernandez, Svea
Jones, Tucker
Kumari, Nimisha
Leitherer, Claus
Martin, Crystal L.
Nanayakkara, Themiya
Pogge, Richard W.
Sanders, Ryan
Senchyna, Peter
Skillman, Evan D.
Stark, Dan P.
Wofford, Aida
Xu, Xinfeng
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Strong nebular emission lines are an important diagnostic tool for tracing the evolution of star-forming galaxies across cosmic time. However, different observational setups can affect these lines, and the derivation of the physical nebular properties. We analyze 12 local star-forming galaxies from the COS Legacy Spectroscopy SurveY (CLASSY) to assess the impact of using different aperture combinations on the determination of the physical conditions and gas-phase metallicity. We compare optical spectra observed with the SDSS aperture, which has a 3" of diameter similar to COS, to IFU and longslit spectra, including new LBT/MODS observations of five CLASSY galaxies. We calculate the reddening, electron densities and temperatures, metallicities, star formation rates, and equivalent widths (EWs). We find that measurements of the electron densities and temperatures, and metallicity remained roughly constant with aperture size, indicating that the gas conditions are relatively uniform for this sample. However, using the IFU observations of 3 galaxies, we find that the E(B-V) values derived from the Balmer ratios decrease ( by up to 53%) with increasing aperture size. The values change most significantly in the center of the galaxies, and level out near the COS aperture diameter of 2.5". We examine the relative contributions from the gas and stars using the H$\alpha$ and [OIII] $\lambda$5007 EWs as a function of aperture light fraction, but find little to no variations within a given galaxy. These results imply that the optical spectra provide nebular properties appropriate for the FUV CLASSY spectra, even when narrow 1.0" long-slit observations are used.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2206.04280
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac7854