Carbon and oxygen abundances from recombination lines in low-metallicity star-forming galaxies. Implications for chemical evolution
C. Esteban, J. Garc\'ia-Rojas, L. Carigi, M. Peimbert, F. Bresolin, A., R. L\'opez-S\'anchez, A. Mesa-Delgado

TL;DR
This study uses deep spectrophotometry to measure carbon and oxygen abundances in low-metallicity star-forming galaxies, providing insights into their chemical evolution and the origins of elements in different galactic environments.
Contribution
It presents new measurements of C/O ratios from recombination lines in low-metallicity galaxies, revealing distinct chemical evolution patterns and supporting galaxy formation scenarios.
Findings
HII regions in dwarf galaxies have different C/O vs. O/H relations than spiral galaxy inner discs.
Most C in metal-poor HII regions likely originates from processes similar to halo stars.
Coupling between C and N enrichment breaks down at very low metallicities.
Abstract
We present deep echelle spectrophotometry of the brightest emission-line knots of the star-forming galaxies He 2-10, Mkn 1271, NGC 3125, NGC 5408, POX 4, SDSS J1253-0312, Tol 1457-262, Tol 1924-416 and the HII region Hubble V in the Local Group dwarf irregular galaxy NGC 6822. The data have been taken with the Very Large Telescope Ultraviolet-Visual Echelle Spectrograph in the 3100-10420 {\AA} range. We determine electron densities and temperatures of the ionized gas from several emission-line intensity ratios for all the objects. We derive the ionic abundances of C and/or O from faint pure recombination lines (RLs) in several of the objects, permitting to derive their C/H and C/O ratios. We have explored the chemical evolution at low metallicities analysing the C/O vs. O/H, C/O vs. N/O and C/N vs. O/H relations for Galactic and extragalactic HII regions and comparing with…
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