From Carbon to Cobalt: Chemical compositions and ages of $z\sim0.7$ quiescent galaxies
Aliza G. Beverage, Mariska Kriek, Charlie Conroy, Nathan R. Sandford,, Rachel Bezanson, Marijn Franx, Arjen van der Wel, Daniel R. Weisz

TL;DR
This study analyzes elemental abundances and ages of 135 quiescent galaxies at z~0.7, revealing correlations with velocity dispersion, similarities to local galaxies, and highlighting gaps in current chemical evolution models.
Contribution
It provides detailed elemental abundance measurements for high-redshift quiescent galaxies and compares their properties to local counterparts, revealing evolutionary trends and model discrepancies.
Findings
Higher dispersion galaxies formed earlier and are more metal-rich.
Minimal evolution in abundance patterns for high-mass galaxies since z~0.
Low-mass galaxies show significant growth and slight abundance enhancements.
Abstract
We present elemental abundance patterns (C, N, Mg, Si, Ca, Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co, and Ni) for a population of 135 massive quiescent galaxies at with ultra-deep rest-frame optical spectroscopy drawn from the LEGA-C survey. We derive average ages and elemental abundances in four bins of stellar velocity dispersion () ranging from 150kms to 250kms using a full-spectrum hierarchical Bayesian model. The resulting elemental abundance measurements are precise to 0.05dex. The majority of elements, as well as the total metallicity and stellar age, show a positive correlation with . Thus, the highest dispersion galaxies formed the earliest and are the most metal-rich. We find only mild or non-significant trends between [X/Fe] and , suggesting that the average star-formation timescale does not strongly depend on velocity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
