Measuring the mixing scale of the ISM within nearby spiral galaxies
Kathryn Kreckel, I-Ting Ho, Guillermo A. Blanc, Simon C. O. Glover,, Brent Groves, Erik Rosolowsky, Frank Bigiel, Mederic Boquien, Melanie, Chevance, Daniel A. Dale, Sinan Deger, Eric Emsellem, Kathryn Grasha, Jenny, J. Kim, Ralf S. Klessen, J. M. Diederik Kruijssen

TL;DR
This study measures the spatial distribution of metallicities in nearby spiral galaxies to quantify the scale of chemical mixing, revealing high homogeneity on small scales and correlations with gas velocity dispersion.
Contribution
It introduces a method to quantify the mixing scale of metals in galaxy discs using two-point correlation functions applied to integral field spectroscopy data.
Findings
Metallicity distribution is highly homogeneous on scales less than 600 pc.
The mixing scale correlates better with gas velocity dispersion than star formation rate.
Homogeneity is driven by large-scale mixing rather than recent star formation pollution.
Abstract
The spatial distribution of metals reflects, and can be used to constrain, the processes of chemical enrichment and mixing. Using PHANGS-MUSE optical integral field spectroscopy, we measure the gas phase oxygen abundances (metallicities) across 7,138 HII regions in a sample of eight nearby disc galaxies. In Paper I (Kreckel et al. 2019) we measure and report linear radial gradients in the metallicities of each galaxy, and qualitatively searched for azimuthal abundance variations. Here, we examine the two-dimensional variation in abundances once the radial gradient is subtracted, Delta(O/H), in order to quantify the homogeneity of the metal distribution and to measure the mixing scale over which HII region metallicities are correlated. We observe low (0.03--0.05 dex) scatter in Delta(O/H) globally in all galaxies, with significantly lower (0.02--0.03 dex) scatter on small (<600 pc)…
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