A Glimpse of the Low-Mass End of the Direct Mass-Metallicity Relation at $z\sim6-8$
Tiger Yu-Yang Hsiao, John Chisholm, Danielle A. Berg, Steven L. Finkelstein, Vasily Kokorev, Hakim Atek, Rohan P. Naidu, Seiji Fujimoto, Lukas J. Furtak, Angela Adamo, Archana Aravindan, Yoshihisa Asada, Arghyadeep Basu, Jeremy Blaizot, Nicholas Choustikov

TL;DR
This study uses deep JWST observations to measure the low-mass end of the mass-metallicity relation at high redshift ($z ext{~}6-8$) through direct metallicity measurements, revealing lower metallicities and larger scatter than in local galaxies.
Contribution
First direct metallicity measurements of low-mass ($ ext{~}10^{6-8} ext{ M}_ ext{sun}$) galaxies at $z ext{~}6-8$, expanding understanding of early universe chemical evolution.
Findings
Direct metallicities are consistent with strong-line diagnostics.
The low-mass MZR at $z ext{~}6-8$ is 0.3-0.5 dex lower than local galaxies.
The MZR slope is $0.25 extpm0.10$, similar to local universe.
Abstract
The competition between metal synthesis and feedback from massive stars establishes the mass-metallicity relation (MZR) at low-redshifts. Examining this relation at higher redshifts, particularly at the low-mass end , is essential for understanding chemical enrichment and stellar feedback. In this study, we utilize the deep (hrs) JWST/NIRSpec G395M GLIMPSE-D survey of the lensed field Abell S1063, to explore the low-mass end of the MZR at high redshift (). We identify eight [OIII]4364 emitters, enabling the most reliable "direct" metallicity measurements in galaxies down to stellar masses of . By combining our sample and galaxies with [OIII]4364 detections from the literature, we calculate direct metallicities for 21 galaxies. We compare our direct metallicities to those derived from…
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