Iron and alpha-element Production in the First One Billion Years after the Big Bang
George D. Becker (1), Wallace L. W. Sargent (2), Michael Rauch (3),, Robert F. Carswell (1) ((1) KICC/IoA Cambridge, (2) Caltech, (3) Carnegie, Observatories)

TL;DR
This study measures elemental abundances in early universe quasar absorption systems, revealing consistent metal yields from massive stars within the first billion years after the Big Bang, with minimal evolution over redshift.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of element ratios at z > 4.7, constraining early stellar nucleosynthesis and metal production in the first gigayear of cosmic history.
Findings
Element ratios are similar to lower-redshift DLAs, indicating minimal evolution.
Dust depletion and ionization effects are negligible in these systems.
Results align with metal-poor Galactic halo stars, suggesting early star formation.
Abstract
We present measurements of carbon, oxygen, silicon, and iron in quasar absorption systems existing when the universe was roughly one billion years old. We measure column densities in nine low-ionization systems at 4.7 < z < 6.3 using Keck, Magellan, and VLT optical and near-infrared spectra with moderate to high resolution. The column density ratios among C II, O I, Si II, and Fe II are nearly identical to sub-DLAs and metal-poor ([M/H] < -1) DLAs at lower redshifts, with no significant evolution over 2 < z < 6. The estimated intrinsic scatter in the ratio of any two elements is also small, with a typical r.m.s. deviation of <0.1 dex. These facts suggest that dust depletion and ionization effects are minimal in our z > 4.7 systems, as in the lower-redshift DLAs, and that the column density ratios are close to the intrinsic relative element abundances. The abundances in our z > 4.7…
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