The mass-metallicity relation of zCOSMOS galaxies at z ~ 0.7, its dependence on SFR, and the existence of massive low-metallicity galaxies
C. Maier (University of Vienna, Department of Astrophysics, Austria),, B. L. Ziegler (University of Vienna, Department of Astrophysics, Austria),, S.J. Lilly (ETH Zurich, Switzerland), T. Contini (IRAP, Toulouse, France), E., Perez Montero (IAA, Granada, Spain)

TL;DR
This study investigates the mass-metallicity relation of zCOSMOS galaxies at z~0.7, revealing a steeper low-mass slope, the existence of massive low-metallicity galaxies, and the influence of SFR on metallicity, supporting a non-evolving fundamental metallicity relation.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurements of gas metallicities in zCOSMOS galaxies at z~0.7 using NIR spectroscopy, and demonstrates the impact of SFR on the mass-metallicity relation at this epoch.
Findings
19% of low-mass galaxies are more metal-poor than local counterparts.
The low-mass end of the MZR is steeper at z~0.7.
Galaxies follow a non-evolving fundamental metallicity relation.
Abstract
(Abridged) The knowledge of the number and of the physical nature of low-metallicity massive galaxies is crucial for the determination and interpretation of the mass-metallicity relation (MZR). Using VLT-ISAAC near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy of 39 zCOSMOS z~0.7 galaxies, we have measured Halpha and [NII] emission line fluxes for galaxies with [OII], Hbeta and [OIII] available from VIMOS optical spectroscopy. The NIR spectroscopy enables us to break the degeneracy of the R23 method to derive unambiguously O/H gas metallicities, and also SFRs from extinction corrected Halpha. Using, as a benchmark, the position in the D4000 vs. [OIII]/Hbeta diagram of galaxies with reliable O/Hs from NIR spectroscopy, we were able to break the lower/upper branch R23 degeneracy of additional 900 zCOSMOS z~0.7 galaxies. Additionally, the Halpha-based SFR measurements were used to find the best SFR…
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