Metallicity Diagnostics with Infrared Fine-Structure Lines
Tohru Nagao (1), Roberto Maiolino (2), Alessandro Marconi (3), Hideo, Matsuhara (4) ((1) Ehime Univ., (2) Rome Observatory, (3) Florence Univ., (4), ISAS/JAXA)

TL;DR
This paper introduces infrared fine-structure emission line diagnostics for measuring galaxy gas metallicity, especially in dust-obscured systems, using models and demonstrating detectability with current and future infrared observatories.
Contribution
It proposes new infrared-based metallicity diagnostics that are less affected by dust extinction and physical parameter uncertainties, extending metallicity measurements to higher redshifts.
Findings
The ([OIII]+[OIII])/ [NIII] flux ratio is an effective metallicity tracer.
Individual line ratios are sensitive to gas density and ionization parameters.
Detectability of these lines with Herschel and SPICA enables metallicity studies at z>1.
Abstract
Although measuring the gas metallicity in galaxies at various redshifts is crucial to constrain galaxy evolutionary scenarios, only rest-frame optical emission lines have been generally used to measure the metallicity. This has prevented us to accurately measure the metallicity of dust-obscured galaxies, and accordingly to understand the chemical evolution of dusty populations, such as ultraluminous infrared galaxies. Here we propose diagnostics of the gas metallicity based on infrared fine structure emission lines, which are nearly unaffected by dust extinction even the most obscured systems. Specifically, we focus on fine-structure lines arising mostly from HII regions, not in photo-dissociation regions, to minimize the dependence and uncertainties of the metallicity diagnostics from various physical parameters. Based on photoionization models, we show that the emission-line flux…
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