Discovery of Strongly Inverted Metallicity Gradients in Dwarf Galaxies at $z$$\sim$2
Xin Wang, Tucker A. Jones, Tommaso Treu, Jessie Hirtenstein, Gabriel, B. Brammer, Emanuele Daddi, Xiao-Lei Meng, Takahiro Morishita, Louis E., Abramson, Alaina L. Henry, Ying-jie Peng, Kasper B. Schmidt, Keren Sharon,, Michele Trenti, Benedetta Vulcani

TL;DR
This study presents the first high-resolution measurements of strongly inverted metallicity gradients in two dwarf galaxies at z~2, revealing complex gas flows and outflows that influence early disk growth.
Contribution
It provides novel spatially resolved metallicity maps of dwarf galaxies at high redshift, highlighting the role of gas outflows and complex chemical evolution in early galaxy formation.
Findings
Highly inverted metallicity gradients observed in dwarf galaxies at z~2.
Gas outflows driven by starbursts influence metallicity distribution.
Pure gas accretion models cannot explain observed metallicity variations.
Abstract
We report the first sub-kiloparsec spatial resolution measurements of strongly inverted gas-phase metallicity gradients in two dwarf galaxies at 2. The galaxies have stellar masses , specific star-formation rate 20 Gyr, and global metallicity (1/4 solar), assuming the Maiolino et al. (2008) strong line calibrations of OIII/Hb and OII/Hb. Their metallicity radial gradients are measured to be highly inverted, i.e., 0.1220.008 and 0.1110.017 dex/kpc, which is hitherto unseen at such small masses in similar redshift ranges. From the Hubble Space Telescope observations of the source nebular emission and stellar continuum, we present the 2-dimensional spatial maps of star-formation rate surface density, stellar population age, and gas fraction, which show that our galaxies are currently undergoing rapid mass…
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