# Evidence for azimuthal variations of the oxygen abundance gradient   tracing the spiral structure of the galaxy HCG91c

**Authors:** F.P.A. Vogt, E. P\'erez, M.A. Dopita, L. Verdes-Montenegro, S., Borthakur

arXiv: 1701.01728 · 2017-05-03

## TL;DR

This study maps the oxygen abundance variations across the spiral galaxy HCG91c, revealing localized and spiral boundary-related fluctuations, emphasizing the importance of high-resolution integral field spectroscopy in understanding galactic chemical distributions.

## Contribution

The paper provides the first detailed mapping of azimuthal oxygen abundance variations in HCG91c using deep MUSE observations, highlighting the role of spiral structures in chemical enrichment.

## Key findings

- Oxygen abundance varies rapidly across the galaxy.
- Variations are localized and associated with HII regions.
- Enrichment occurs preferentially along spiral arms.

## Abstract

Context. The distribution of elements in galaxies forms an important diagnostic tool to characterize the system's formation and evolution. This tool is however complex to use in practice, as galaxies are subject to a range of simultaneous physical processes active from pc to kpc scales. This renders observations of the full optical extent of galaxies down to sub-kpc scales essential. Aims. Using the WiFeS integral field spectrograph, we previously detected abrupt and localized variations in the gas-phase oxygen abundance of the spiral galaxy HCG91c. Here, we follow-up on these observations to map HCG91c's disk out to ~2Re at a resolution of 600pc, and characterize the non-radial variations of the gas-phase oxygen abundance in the system. Methods. We obtained deep MUSE observations of the target under ~0.6 arcsec seeing conditions. We perform both a spaxel-based and aperture-based analysis of the data to map the spatial variations of 12+log(O/H) across the disk of the galaxy. Results. We confirm the presence of rapid variations of the oxygen abundance across the entire extent of the galaxy previously detected with WiFeS, for all azimuths and radii. The variations can be separated in two categories: a) localized and associated with individual HII regions, and b) extended over kpc scales, and occurring at the boundaries of the spiral structures in the galaxy. Conclusions. Our MUSE observations suggest that the enrichment of the interstellar medium in HGC91c has proceeded preferentially along spiral structures, and less efficiently across them. Our dataset highlights the importance of distinguishing individual star-forming regions down to scales of a few 100pc when using integral field spectrographs to spatially resolve the distribution of oxygen abundances in a given system, and accurately characterize azimuthal variations and intrinsic scatter.

## Full text

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## Figures

21 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.01728/full.md

## References

70 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.01728/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.01728