The resolved chemical abundance properties within the interstellar medium of star-forming galaxies at $\mathbf{ \textit{z} \approx 1.5}$
S. Gillman (1,2), A. Puglisi (3), U. Dudzevi\v{c}i\=ut\.e (3,4), A. M., Swinbank (3), A. L. Tiley (3,5), C. M. Harrison (6), J. Molina (7), R. M., Sharples (8), R. G. Bower (9), M. Cirasuolo (10), Edo Ibar (11), D., Obreschkow (5,12) ( (1) DAWN, Denmark, (2) DTU-Space, Denmark

TL;DR
This study uses deep integral field data to analyze the chemical abundance properties of star-forming galaxies at redshift 1.5, revealing metallicity relations, gradients, and their connection to star formation activity.
Contribution
It provides the first spatially resolved analysis of metallicity gradients and azimuthal variations in galaxies at z≈1.5, linking these to star formation density.
Findings
Confirmed the mass-metallicity relation at z≈1.5 with lower metallicities than local galaxies.
Measured median electron density of interstellar medium at log10(n_e)=1.95.
Detected a median metallicity gradient of -0.015 dex/kpc within galaxies.
Abstract
We exploit the unprecedented depth of integral field data from the KMOS Ultra-deep Rotational Velocity Survey (KURVS) to analyse the strong (H) and forbidden ([NII], [SII]) emission line ratios in 22 main-sequence galaxies at . Using the [NII]/H emission-line ratio we confirm the presence of the stellar mass gas-phase metallicity relation at this epoch, with galaxies exhibiting on average 0.130.04 dex lower gas-phase metallicity (12+log(O/H)=8.400.03) for a given stellar mass (([]=10.10.1) than local main-sequence galaxies. We determine the galaxy-integrated [SII] doublet ratio, with a median value of [SII]6716/6731=1.260.14 equivalent to an electron density of log([cm])=1.950.12. Utilising CANDELS multi-band imaging we define the pixel…
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