Tracing nitrogen enrichment across cosmic time with JWST
E. Cataldi, F. Belfiore, M. Curti, B. Moreschini, A. Marconi, R. Maiolino, A. Feltre, M. Ginolfi, F. Mannucci, G. Cresci, X. Ji, A. Amiri, M. Arnaboldi, E. Bertola, C. Bracci, M. Ceci, A. Chakraborty, F. Cullen, Q. D'Amato, C. Kobayashi, I. Lamperti, C. Marconcini, M. Scialpi

TL;DR
This study uses JWST/NIRSpec data to analyze nitrogen-to-oxygen ratios in ~660 galaxies at redshift z~1-6, revealing systematic nitrogen enhancement at high redshift and establishing new high-redshift calibration methods.
Contribution
First high-redshift calibration of N/O diagnostics based on direct abundance measurements, revealing mild nitrogen enhancement in early galaxies.
Findings
High-redshift galaxies show ~0.18 dex higher N/O at fixed O/H compared to local galaxies.
Mild evolution observed in N2O2 diagnostic; no clear evolution in N2S2 diagnostic.
Evidence supports nitrogen enhancement especially at low metallicity in early universe galaxies.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive analysis of the nitrogen-to-oxygen (N/O) abundance ratio in a sample of ~ 660 star-forming galaxies at redshift z ~ 1-6, with a median redshift of z = 3.0, using deep JWST/NIRSpec spectroscopy. Leveraging detections of faint auroral emission lines in 92 galaxies at z>1 from both the MARTA survey and a large compilation of high-redshift literature objects, we derive direct electron temperature-based abundances for nitrogen and oxygen using rest-frame optical lines. We establish the first high-redshift calibrations of strong-line N/O diagnostics based on 'direct' abundance measurements, finding a mild evolution for the N2O2 = log([NII]6585/[OII]3727,3729) diagnostic and no clear evolution for the N2S2 = log([NII]6585/[SII]6717,6731) diagnostic compared to local realisations. We then investigate the N/O-O/H relation across cosmic time using both 'direct'…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
