Magellan/MMIRS near-infrared multi-object spectroscopy of nebular emission from star forming galaxies at 2<z<3
Lucia Guaita, Harold Francke, Eric Gawiser, Franz E. Bauer, Matthew, Hayes, Goran Ostlin, and Nelson Padilla

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared spectroscopy to analyze nebular emission lines from star-forming galaxies at redshifts 2 to 3, revealing insights into their metallicity, kinematics, and star formation activity, and proposing a new flux ratio diagnostic.
Contribution
It presents new spectroscopic measurements of nebular emission lines in high-redshift galaxies, including metallicity estimates and velocity offsets, and introduces the Lyalpha/[OIII] flux ratio as a diagnostic tool.
Findings
Detected emission lines in 17 galaxies, including 4 AGN.
Measured metallicities consistent with 0.3<Z/Zsun<1.2.
Found velocity offsets suggestive of star formation-driven outflows.
Abstract
To investigate the ingredients, which allow star-forming galaxies to present Lyalpha line in emission, we studied the kinematics and gas phase metallicity (Z) of the interstellar medium. We used multi-object NIR spectroscopy with Magellan/MMIRS to study nebular emission from z=2-3 star-forming galaxies discovered in 3 MUSYC fields. We detected emission lines from four active galactic nuclei and 13 high-z star-forming galaxies, including Halpha lines down to a flux of 4.E-17 erg/sec/cm^2. This yielded 7 new redshifts. The most common emission line detected is [OIII]5007, which is sensitive to Z. We were able to measure Z for 2 galaxies and to set upper(lower) limits for another 2(2). The Z values are consistent with 0.3<Z/Zsun<1.2. Comparing the Lyalpha central wavelength with the systemic redshift, we find Delta_v(Lyalpha-[OIII])=70-270 km/sec. High-redshift star-forming galaxies,…
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