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On the Average Ultraviolet Emission Line Spectra of High-Redshift Galaxies: Hot and Cold, Carbon-poor, Nitrogen-modest, and Oozing Ionizing Photons

Authors :
Hayes, Matthew J.
Saldana-Lopez, Alberto
Citro, Annalisa
James, Bethan L.
Mingozzi, Matilde
Scarlata, Claudia
Martinez, Zorayda
Berg, Danielle A.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We determine the spectroscopic properties of ~1000 ostensibly star-forming galaxies at redshifts (z=4-10) using prism spectroscopy from JWST/NIRSpec. With rest-wavelength coverage between Lya and [S II] in the optical, we stack spectra as a function of nebular conditions, and compare UV spectral properties with stellar age. This reveals UV lines of N III], N IV], C III], C IV, He II, and O III] in the average high-z galaxy. All UV lines are more intense in younger starbursts. We measure electron temperatures from the collisionally excited [O III] line ratios, finding Te=18000-22000 K for the O++ regions. We also detect a significant nebular Balmer Jump from which we estimate only Te=8000-13000 K. Accounting for typical temperature offsets between zones bearing doubly and singly ionized oxygen, these two temperatures remain discrepant by around 40%. We use the [O III] temperatures to estimate abundances of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen. We find that log(C/O) is consistently ~-1, with no evolution of C/O with metallicity or stellar age. The average spectra are mildly enhanced in Nitrogen, with higher N/O than low-z starbursts, but are less enhanced than samples of high-z galaxies with visible UV N III] and N IV]. Whatever processes produce the N-enhancement in the individual galaxies must also be ongoing, at lower levels, in the median galaxy in the early Universe. The strongest starbursts are a source of significant ionizing emission: ionizing photon production efficiencies reach 10^25.7 Hz/erg, and show multiple signatures of high Lyman continuum escape, including Mg II escape fractions nearing 100%, significant deficits in [S II] emission, high degrees of ionization, and blue UV colors.<br />Comment: Submitted to the ApJ. 23 pages, 10 figures, 8 tables, 8 authors, 7 sections, ~3MB, one world. Comments welcome

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2411.09262
Document Type :
Working Paper