Rest-frame UV spectroscopy of extreme [OIII] emitters at $1.3<z<3.7$: Toward a high-redshift UV reference sample for JWST
Mengtao Tang, Daniel Stark, Jacopo Chevallard, St\'ephane Charlot,, Ryan Endsley, and Enrico Congiu

TL;DR
This study investigates rest-frame UV emission lines in galaxies at redshifts 1.3 to 3.7, revealing how metallicity and star formation rates influence line strengths, providing a reference for interpreting high-redshift galaxy spectra observed by JWST.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed analysis of UV emission line properties in intermediate-redshift galaxies, linking line strengths to metallicity and star formation, and establishes a baseline for high-redshift galaxy studies.
Findings
Strong CIII] emission at high redshift requires low metallicity gas.
Weaker CIII] emission correlates with moderate metallicities.
The fraction of strong UV line emitters at 1.3<z<3.7 provides a baseline for high-redshift comparisons.
Abstract
Deep spectroscopy of galaxies in the reionization-era has revealed intense CIII] and CIV line emission (EW \r{A}). In order to interpret the nebular emission emerging at , we have begun targeting rest-frame UV emission lines in galaxies with large specific star formation rates (sSFRs) at . We find that CIII] reaches the EWs seen at only in large sSFR galaxies with [OIII]+H EW \r{A}. In contrast to previous studies, we find that many galaxies with intense [OIII] have weak CIII] emission (EW \r{A}), suggesting that the radiation field associated with young stellar populations is not sufficient to power strong CIII]. Photoionization models demonstrate that the spread in CIII] among systems with large sSFRs ([OIII]+H EW \r{A}) is driven by variations in metallicity, a result of the extreme sensitivity of CIII] to electron…
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