C, N, O Abundances in the Most Metal-Poor Damped Lyman alpha Systems
Max Pettini (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge),, Berkeley J. Zych (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge), Charles, C. Steidel (California Institute of Technology), Fred H. Chaffee (W. M. Keck, Observatory)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the abundances of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen in the most metal-poor damped Lyman alpha systems at high redshift, revealing enhanced production likely due to stellar rotation effects in early massive stars.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of C, N, and O in extremely metal-poor DLAs, showing deviations from standard chemical evolution models and suggesting stellar rotation influences early nucleosynthesis.
Findings
C/O ratios match halo stars at low metallicity
N/O ratios may be above simple expectations
Enhanced C and N production likely from rotating massive stars
Abstract
This study focuses on some of the most metal-poor damped Lyman alpha absorbers known in the spectra of high redshift QSOs, using new and archival observations obtained with UV-sensitive echelle spectrographs on the Keck and VLT telescopes. The weakness and simple velocity structure of the absorption lines in these systems allows us to measure the abundances of several elements, and in particular those of C, N, and O, a group that is difficult to study in DLAs of more typical metallicities. We find that when the oxygen abundance is less than about 1/100 of solar, the C/O ratio in high redshift DLAs and sub-DLAs matches that of halo stars of similar metallicity and shows higher values than expected from galactic chemical evolution models based on conventional stellar yields. Furthermore, there are indications that at these low metallicities the N/O ratio may also be above simple…
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