Element Abundances in a Gas-rich Galaxy at z = 5: Clues to the Early Chemical Enrichment of Galaxies
Sean Morrison, Varsha P. Kulkarni, Debopam Som, Bryan DeMarcy, Samuel, Quiret, Celine Peroux

TL;DR
This study presents the first measurement of element abundances in a gas-rich galaxy at redshift 5, revealing low metallicity and unusual element ratios that provide insights into early universe chemical enrichment and stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides the first undepleted element abundance measurements in a z=5 sub-DLA, offering new data on early galaxy chemical composition and dust formation.
Findings
The galaxy has very low metallicity, with O/H significantly below lower-redshift trends.
The C/O and Si/O ratios are lower than solar, indicating different nucleosynthesis or dust depletion.
No clear alpha/Fe enhancement was observed, suggesting unique early stellar processes.
Abstract
Element abundances in high-redshift quasar absorbers offer excellent probes of the chemical enrichment of distant galaxies, and can constrain models for population III and early population II stars. Recent observations indicate that the sub-damped Lyman-alpha (sub-DLA) absorbers are more metal-rich than DLA absorbers at redshifts 03. It has also been suggested that the DLA metallicity drops suddenly at 4.7. However, only 3 DLAs at 4.5 and none at 3.5 have "dust-free" metallicity measurements of undepleted elements. We report the first quasar sub-DLA metallicity measurement at 3.5, from detections of undepleted elements in high-resolution data for a sub-DLA at =5.0. We obtain fairly robust abundances of C, O, Si, and Fe, using lines outside the Lyman-alpha forest. This absorber is metal-poor, with O/H]=-2.000.12, which is 4 below…
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