The shape of oxygen abundance profiles explored with MUSE: evidence for widespread deviations from single gradients
L. S\'anchez-Menguiano, S. F. S\'anchez, I. P\'erez, T. Ruiz-Lara, L., Galbany, J. P. Anderson, T. Kr\"uhler, H. Kuncarayakti, J. D. Lyman

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution MUSE data to analyze oxygen abundance profiles in 102 spiral galaxies, revealing common deviations from simple gradients such as inner drops and outer flattenings, which are influenced by galaxy mass and possibly radial motions.
Contribution
Developed a new automated method to fit abundance profiles, demonstrating that deviations from single gradients are widespread and related to galaxy properties.
Findings
55 galaxies exhibit a single negative gradient
Inner drops depend on galaxy mass, deepest in most massive galaxies
Inner drops occur around 0.5 r_e, outer flattenings vary in position
Abstract
We characterise the oxygen abundance radial distribution of a sample of 102 spiral galaxies observed with VLT/MUSE using the O3N2 calibrator. The high spatial resolution of the data allows us to detect 14345 HII regions with the same image quality as with photometric data, avoiding any dilution effect. We develop a new methodology to automatically fit the abundance radial profiles, finding that 55 galaxies of the sample exhibit a single negative gradient. The remaining 47 galaxies also display, as well as this negative trend, either an inner drop in the abundances (21), an outer flattening (10) or both (16), which suggests that these features are a common property of disc galaxies. The presence and depth of the inner drop depends on the stellar mass of the galaxies with the most massive systems presenting the deepest abundance drops, while there is no such dependence for the outer…
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