Spatially resolved mass-metallicity relation at z~0.26 from the MUSE-Wide Survey
Yao Yao, Guangwen Chen, Haiyang Liu, Xinkai Chen, Zesen Lin, Hong-Xin, Zhang, Yulong Gao, Xu Kong

TL;DR
This study investigates the spatially resolved mass-metallicity relation at redshift ~0.26 using MUSE-Wide data, revealing evolution in galaxy properties consistent with local universe trends.
Contribution
It provides the first measurement of the spatially resolved mass-metallicity relation at z~0.26, showing evolution compared to local galaxies.
Findings
rSFMS has a slope of ~0.771 at z~0.26
rMZR exists with lower metallicity than local galaxies
No clear evidence for the spatially resolved fundamental metallicity relation at z~0.26
Abstract
Aims: There is a spatially resolved star-forming main sequence (rSFMS) and mass-metallicity relation (rMZR) of galaxies in local universe. We know that the global mass-metallicity relation (MZR) results from the integral of rMZR, and it will evolve with the redshift. However, the evolution of rMZR with redshift is still unclear due to the low spatial resolution and signal-to-noise ratio. There are currently too few observations beyond local universe, and only simulations can reproduce the evolution of rMZR with redshift. Methods: In this work, we select ten emission-line galaxies with an average redshift of from MUSE-Wide DR1. We obtain the spatially resolved star formation rate (SFR) and metallicity from the integral field spectroscopy (IFS), as well as the stellar mass surface density from the 3D-HST photometry. We derive the rSFMS and rMZR at and compare…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Technology and Applications
