The mass-metallicity relation at z~1.4 revealed with Subaru/FMOS
astro-ph.CO
/ Authors
Kiyoto Yabe, Kouji Ohta, Fumihide Iwamuro, Masayuki Akiyama, Naoyuki Tamura, Suraphong Yuma, Masahiko Kimura, Naruhisa Takato, Yuki Moritani, Masanao Sumiyoshi
and 9 more authors
Toshinori Maihara, John Silverman, Gavin Dalton, Ian Lewis, David Bonfield, Hanshin Lee, Emma Curtis-Lake, Edward Macaulay, Fraser Clarke
/ Abstract
We present a stellar mass-metallicity relation at z~1.4 with an unprecedentedly large sample of ~340 star-forming galaxies obtained with FMOS on the Subaru Telescope. We observed K-band selected galaxies at 1.2 < z_{ph} < 1.6 in the SXDS/UDS fields with M_{*} > 10^{9.5} M_{\sun}, and expected F(Hα) > 5 \times 10^{-17} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2}. Among the observed ~1200 targets, 343 objects show significant Hαemission lines. The gas-phase metallicity is obtained from [NII]λ6584/Hαline ratio, after excluding possible active galactic nuclei (AGNs). Due to the faintness of the [NII]λ6584 lines, we apply the stacking analysis and derive the mass-metallicity relation at z~1.4. Our results are compared to past results at different redshifts in the literature. The mass-metallicity relation at z~1.4 is located between those at z~0.8 and z~2.2; it is found that the metallicity increases with decreasing redshift from z~3 to z~0 at fixed stellar mass. Thanks to the large size of the sample, we can study the dependence of the mass-metallicity relation on various galaxy physical properties. The average metallicity from the stacked spectra is close to the local FMR in the higher metallicity part but >0.1 dex higher in metallicity than the FMR in the lower metallicity part. We find that galaxies with larger E(B-V), B-R, and R-H colours tend to show higher metallicity by ~0.05 dex at fixed stellar mass. We also find relatively clearer size dependence that objects with smaller half light radius tend to show higher metallicity by ~0.1 dex at fixed stellar mass, especially in the low mass part.