Nebular Emission Line Ratios in z~2-3 Star-Forming Galaxies with KBSS-MOSFIRE: Exploring the Impact of Ionization, Excitation, and Nitrogen-to-Oxygen Ratio
Allison L. Strom, Charles C. Steidel, Gwen C. Rudie, Ryan F. Trainor,, Max Pettini, and Naveen A. Reddy

TL;DR
This study analyzes nebular emission lines in ~380 star-forming galaxies at z~2-3, revealing higher excitation and nitrogen-to-oxygen ratios compared to local galaxies, indicating harder ionizing radiation fields and different star formation histories.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of nebular emission lines in high-redshift galaxies and compares them with local galaxies, highlighting differences in excitation and chemical abundance ratios.
Findings
High-redshift galaxies show enhanced nebular excitation.
They have higher N/O ratios at fixed excitation.
Evidence for harder ionizing radiation fields at z~2-3.
Abstract
We present a detailed study of the rest-optical (3600-7000 Angstrom) nebular spectra of ~380 star-forming galaxies at z~2-3 obtained with Keck/MOSFIRE as part of the Keck Baryonic Structure Survey (KBSS). The KBSS-MOSFIRE sample is representative of star-forming galaxies at these redshifts, with stellar masses M*=10^9-10^11.5 M_sun and star formation rates SFR=3-1000 M_sun/yr. We focus on robust measurements of many strong diagnostic emission lines for individual galaxies: [O II]3727,3729, [Ne III]3869, H-beta, [O III]4960,5008, [N II]6549,6585, H-alpha, and [S II]6718,6732. Comparisons with observations of typical local galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and between subsamples of KBSS-MOSFIRE show that high-redshift galaxies exhibit a number of significant differences in addition to the well-known offset in log([O III]/H-beta) and log([N II]/H-alpha). We argue that the…
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