The metallicity profile of M31 from spectroscopy of hundreds of HII regions and PNe
Nathan Sanders, Nelson Caldwell, Jonathan McDowell (CfA), Paul Harding, (Case)

TL;DR
This study provides the largest optical spectroscopic dataset of nebular regions in M31, revealing complex metallicity gradients and significant local abundance variations, which are crucial for understanding galaxy chemical evolution.
Contribution
It presents the largest spectroscopic sample of HII regions and PNe in M31, analyzing metallicity gradients and intrinsic scatter with implications for galaxy evolution models.
Findings
Shallow oxygen abundance gradient consistent with previous studies.
Significant intrinsic scatter in metallicity measurements.
Local oxygen abundance variations larger than 0.3 dex in many regions.
Abstract
The oxygen abundance gradients among nebular emission line regions in spiral galaxies have been used as important constraints for models of chemical evolution. We present the largest ever full-wavelength optical spectroscopic sample of emission line nebulae in a spiral galaxy (M31). We have collected spectra of 253 HII regions and 407 planetary nebulae with the Hectospec multi-fiber spectrograph of the MMT. We measure the line-of-sight extinction for 199 HII regions and 333 PNe; we derive oxygen abundance directly, based on the electron temperature, for 51 PNe; and we use strong line methods to estimate oxygen abundance for 192 HII regions and nitrogen abundance for 52 HII regions. The relatively shallow oxygen abundance gradient of the more extended HII regions in our sample is generally in agreement with the result of Zaritsky et al. (1994), based on only 19 M31 HII regions, but…
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