Metal-enriched galactic outflows shape the mass-metallicity relationship
J. Chisholm, C. Tremonti, and C. Leitherer

TL;DR
This study models the metallicity of galactic outflows in local star-forming galaxies, revealing their role in shaping the mass-metallicity relationship through metal-enriched outflows that vary with galaxy mass.
Contribution
It provides the first observational modeling of outflow metallicities across a wide stellar mass range, linking outflow properties to the mass-metallicity relation.
Findings
Outflow metallicity is roughly constant across stellar masses, at about solar metallicity.
Outflows are significantly more metal-rich than the ISM, especially in low-mass galaxies.
The metal-loading factor decreases with increasing stellar mass, aligning with theoretical models.
Abstract
The gas-phase metallicity of low-mass galaxies increases with increasing stellar mass () and is nearly constant for high-mass galaxies. Theory suggests that this tight mass-metallicity relationship is shaped by galactic outflows removing metal-enriched gas from galaxies. Here, we observationally model the outflow metallicities of the warm outflowing phase from a sample of seven local star-forming galaxies with stellar masses between 10-10 M. We estimate the outflow metallicities using four weak rest-frame ultraviolet absorption lines, the observed stellar continua, and photoionization models. The outflow metallicity is flat with , with a median metallicity of Z. The observed outflows are metal-enriched: low and high-mass galaxies have outflow metallicities 10-50 and 2.6 times larger than their ISM metallicities, respectively. The…
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