EMPRESS. II. Highly Fe-Enriched Metal-poor Galaxies with $\sim 1.0$ (Fe/O)$_\odot$ and $0.02$ (O/H)$_\odot$ : Possible Traces of Super Massive ($>300 M_{\odot}$) Stars in Early Galaxies
Takashi Kojima (1,2), Masami Ouchi (3,1,4), Michael Rauch (5),, Yoshiaki Ono (1), Kimihiko Nakajima (3), Yuki Isobe (1,2), Seiji Fujimoto, (6,7), Yuichi Harikane (3,8,1), Takuya Hashimoto (9), Masao Hayashi (3),, Yutaka Komiyama (3), Haruka Kusakabe (10), Ji Hoon Kim (11,12)

TL;DR
This study investigates extremely metal-poor galaxies, revealing unusually high iron-to-oxygen ratios and strong HeII emission, suggesting the influence of super massive stars (>300 M_sun) in early galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides evidence for the presence of super massive stars in early galaxies based on unique chemical abundance patterns and ionization signatures.
Findings
High Fe/O ratios (~90-140% solar) in EMPGs challenge traditional supernova models.
Strong HeII4686/Hβ ratios (~1/40) are inconsistent with known X-ray binary models.
Data suggest super massive stars (>300 M_sun) influenced early galaxy chemical enrichment.
Abstract
We present element abundance ratios and ionizing radiation of local young low-mass (~ M_sun) extremely metal poor galaxies (EMPGs) with a 2% solar oxygen abundance (O/H)_sun and a high specific star-formation rate (sSFR~300 Gyr), and other (extremely) metal poor galaxies, which are compiled from Extremely Metal-Poor Representatives Explored by the Subaru Survey (EMPRESS) and the literature. Weak emission lines such as [FeIII]4658 and HeII4686 are detected in very deep optical spectra of the EMPGs taken with 8m-class telescopes including Keck and Subaru (Kojima et al. 2019, Izotov et al. 2018), enabling us to derive element abundance ratios with photoionization models. We find that neon- and argon-to-oxygen ratios are comparable to those of known local dwarf galaxies, and that the nitrogen-to-oxygen abundance ratios (N/O) are lower than 20% (N/O)_sun consistent with the…
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