Direct Far-infrared Metal Abundances (FIRA). I. M101

Author:

Lamarche C.ORCID,Smith J. D.ORCID,Kreckel K.ORCID,Linden S. T.ORCID,Rogers N. S. J.ORCID,Skillman E.ORCID,Berg D.ORCID,Murphy E.ORCID,Pogge R.ORCID,Donnelly G. P.,Kennicutt R.ORCID,Bolatto A.ORCID,Croxall K.ORCID,Groves B.ORCID,Ferkinhoff C.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Accurately determining gas-phase metal abundances within galaxies is critical as metals strongly affect the physics of the interstellar medium. To date, the vast majority of widely used gas-phase abundance indicators rely on emission from bright optical lines, whose emissivities are highly sensitive to the electron temperature. Alternatively, direct-abundance methods exist that measure the temperature of the emitting gas directly, though these methods usually require challenging observations of highly excited auroral lines. Low-lying far-infrared (FIR) fine structure lines are largely insensitive to electron temperature and thus provide an attractive alternative to optically derived abundances. Here, we introduce the far-infrared abundance (FIRA) project, which employs these FIR transitions, together with both radio free–free emission and hydrogen recombination lines, to derive direct, absolute gas-phase oxygen abundances. Our first target is M101, a nearby spiral galaxy with a relatively steep abundance gradient. Our results are consistent with the O++ electron temperatures and absolute oxygen abundances derived using optical direct-abundance methods by the CHemical Abundance Of Spirals (CHAOS) program, with a small difference (∼1.5σ) in the radial abundance gradients derived by the FIR/free–free-normalized versus CHAOS/direct-abundance techniques. This initial result demonstrates the validity of the FIRA methodology—with the promise of determining absolute metal abundances within dusty star-forming galaxies, both locally and at high redshift.

Funder

NASA ADAP Grant

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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