# The First Metallicity Study of M83 using the integrated UV light of Star   Clusters

**Authors:** Svea Hernandez, S{\o}ren Larsen, Alessandra Aloisi, Danielle A. Berg,, William P. Blair, Andrew J. Fox, Timothy M. Heckman, Bethan L. James, Knox S., Long, Evan D. Skillman, and Bradley C. Whitmore

arXiv: 1901.08063 · 2019-02-27

## TL;DR

This study presents the first UV spectroscopic metallicity measurements of young star clusters in M83, revealing a complex gradient pattern consistent with galaxy evolution models and recent star formation activity.

## Contribution

It introduces a novel UV integrated-light spectroscopic method for measuring metallicities in extragalactic star clusters and maps the metallicity gradient in M83 with new insights.

## Key findings

- Central metallicity of +0.20 dex in M83
- UV metallicity gradient of -0.041 dex/kpc
- Evidence of two gradient breaks at 0.5 and 1.0 R_25

## Abstract

Stellar populations are powerful tools for investigating the evolution of extragalactic environments. We present the first UV integrated-light spectroscopic observations for 15 young star clusters in the starburst M83 with a special focus on metallicity measurements. The data were obtained with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) onboard the Hubble Space Telescope. We analyse the data applying an abundance technique previously used to study an optical set of star clusters. We estimate a central metallicity of [Z] = $+$0.20 $\pm$ 0.15 dex in agreement with those obtained through independent methods, i.e. $J$-band and blue supergiants. We estimate a UV metallicity gradient of $-$0.041 $\pm$ 0.022 dex kpc$^{-1}$ consistent with the optical metallicity gradient of $-$0.040 $\pm$ 0.032 dex kpc$^{-1}$ for $R/R_{25}<0.5$. Combining our stellar metallicities, UV and optical, with those from HII regions (strong-line abundances based on empirical calibrations) we identify two possible breaks in the gradient of M83 at galactocentric distances of $R\sim0.5$ and $1.0\:R_{25}$. If the abundance breaks are genuine, the metallicity gradient of this galaxy follows a steep-shallow-steep trend, a scenario predicted by three-dimensional (3D) numerical simulations of disc galaxies. The first break is located near the corotation radius. This first steep gradient may have originated by recent star formation episodes and a relatively young bar ($<$1 Gyr). In the numerical simulations the shallow gradient is created by the effects of dilution by outflow where low-metallicity material is mixed with enriched gas. And finally, the second break and last steep gradient mark the farthest galactocentric distances where the outward flow has penetrated.

## Full text

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## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.08063/full.md

## References

118 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.08063/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.08063