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Mass-metallicity relation explored with CALIFA I. Is there a dependence on the star-formation rate?

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors derived a tight relation between the integrated stellar mass and the gas-phase abundance, with a dispersion lower than the one already reported in the literature (σ_Δlog(O/H) = 0.07 dex).
Abstract
We studied the global and local ℳ-Z relation based on the first data available from the CALIFA survey (150 galaxies). This survey provides integral field spectroscopy of the complete optical extent of each galaxy (up to 2−3 effective radii), with a resolution high enough to separate individual H II regions and/or aggregations. About 3000 individual H II regions have been detected. The spectra cover the wavelength range between [OII]3727 and [SII]6731, with a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio to derive the oxygen abundance and star-formation rate associated with each region. In addition, we computed the integrated and spatially resolved stellar masses (and surface densities) based on SDSS photometric data. We explore the relations between the stellar mass, oxygen abundance and star-formation rate using this dataset. We derive a tight relation between the integrated stellar mass and the gas-phase abundance, with a dispersion lower than the one already reported in the literature (σ_Δlog (O/H) = 0.07 dex). Indeed, this dispersion is only slightly higher than the typical error derived for our oxygen abundances. However, we found no secondary relation with the star-formation rate other than the one induced by the primary relation of this quantity with the stellar mass. The analysis for our sample of ~3000 individual H II regions confirms (i) a local mass-metallicity relation and (ii) the lack of a secondary relation with the star-formation rate. The same analysis was performed with similar results for the specific star-formation rate. Our results agree with the scenario in which gas recycling in galaxies, both locally and globally, is much faster than other typical timescales, such like that of gas accretion by inflow and/or metal loss due to outflows. In essence, late-type/disk-dominated galaxies seem to be in a quasi-steady situation, with a behavior similar to the one expected from an instantaneous recycling/closed-box model.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Physical Properties of S0 Galaxy PGC 26218: The Origin of Starburst and Star Formation

TL;DR: Garcia-Benito et al. as mentioned in this paper acknowledge financial support from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness through grant 205 AYA2016-77846-P. They also acknowledge support from State Agency for 206 Research of the Spanish MCIU through the "Center of Excellence Severo Ochoa" award to 207 the Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia (SEV-2017-0709).
Journal ArticleDOI

The Local Star Formation Rate Surface Density and Metallicity Relation for Star-forming Galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relation between gas phase metallicity, local stellar mass surface density, and the local star formation surface density in a sample of 1120 star-forming galaxies from the MaNGA survey.
Dissertation

A new perspective on the evolution of galaxies : from global to local scales

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the Bayesian Technique for Multi-image Analysis (BaTMAn) algorithm for the segmentation of multidimensional data, with emphasis on the statistically meaningful binning of IFS obser- vations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elevation or Suppression? The Resolved Star Formation Main Sequence of Galaxies with Two Different Assembly Modes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the spatially-resolved star formation main sequence in star-forming galaxies (SFGs) using Integral Field Spectroscopic (IFS) observations from the Mapping Nearby Galaxies at the Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) survey.
Journal ArticleDOI

Galaxy evolution on resolved scales: ageing and quenching in CALIFA

TL;DR: In this article, the fundamental mechanism(s) that drive galaxy evolution in the Local Universe was investigated by comparing two proxies of star-formation sensitive to different timescales, such as EW(H$\alpha$) and colours like $g-r$, one may distinguish between smooth secular evolution (ageing) and sudden changes (quenching) on the recent star formation history of galaxies.
References
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The relationship between infrared, optical, and ultraviolet extinction

TL;DR: In this article, the average extinction law over the 3.5 micron to 0.125 wavelength range was derived for both diffuse and dense regions of the interstellar medium. And the validity of the law over a large wavelength interval suggests that the processes which modify the sizes and compositions of grains are stochastic in nature.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey: Technical Summary

Donald G. York
- 27 Jun 2000 - 
TL;DR: The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) as mentioned in this paper provides the data to support detailed investigations of the distribution of luminous and non-luminous matter in the Universe: a photometrically and astrometrically calibrated digital imaging survey of pi steradians above about Galactic latitude 30 degrees in five broad optical bands.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey: Technical summary

Donald G. York, +151 more
TL;DR: The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) as discussed by the authors provides the data to support detailed investigations of the distribution of luminous and non-luminous matter in the universe: a photometrically and astrometrically calibrated digital imaging survey of π sr above about Galactic latitude 30° in five broad optical bands to a depth of g' ~ 23 mag.
Book

Astrophysics of Gaseous Nebulae and Active Galactic Nuclei

TL;DR: In this paper, a comparison of theory with observations internal dynamics of gaseous nebulae interstellar dust H II regions in the galactic context is presented. But the results are limited to the case of active galactic nuclei.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Global Schmidt law in star forming galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, the Schmidt law was used to model the global star formation law over the full range of gas densities and star formation rates observed in galaxies, and the results showed that the SFR scales with the ratio of the gas density to the average orbital timescale.
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