Extreme Emission-Line Galaxies in SDSS. I. Empirical and model-based calibrations of chemical abundances
E. P\'erez-Montero, R. Amor\'in, J. S\'anchez Almeida, J. M., V\'ilchez, R. Garc\'ia-Benito, and C. Kehrig

TL;DR
This study analyzes a large sample of local Extreme Emission Line Galaxies from SDSS to develop and evaluate new empirical and model-based calibrations for determining their chemical abundances, aiding understanding of early galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new empirically calibrated strong-line methods for chemical abundance analysis in EELGs and evaluates photoionization model recipes against direct method results.
Findings
New calibrations agree with high-redshift galaxy studies.
Strong-line ratios depending on ionization parameter are more reliable.
Bayesian code HII-Chi-mistry effectively estimates O/H and N/O.
Abstract
Local star-forming galaxies show properties that are thought to differ from galaxies in the early Universe. Among them, the ionizing stellar populations and the gas geometry make the recipes designed to derive chemical abundances from nebular emission lines to differ from those calibrated in the Local Universe. A sample of 1969 Extreme Emission Line Galaxies (EELGs) at a redshift 0 < z < 0.49, selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to be local analogues of high-redshift galaxies, was used to analyze their most prominent emission lines and to derive total oxygen abundances and nitrogen-to-oxygen ratios following the direct method in the ranges 7.7 < 12+log(O/H) < 8.6 and -1.8 < log(N/O) < -0.8. They allow us to obtain new empirically calibrated strong-line methods and to evaluate other recipes based on photoionization models that can be later used for a chemical analysis of…
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