Low Masses and High Redshifts: The Evolution of the Mass-Metallicity Relation
by
Alaina Henry(NASA Goddard)
→
Europe/Stockholm
FA31
FA31
Description
The mass-metallicity relation in galaxies is sensitive to the exchange of
gas between galaxies and the IGM. As such, observations of this correlation
constrain the feedback processes that regulate the growth of galaxies.
While early studies focusing on relatively massive galaxies (M>10^9-10^9.5
Msun) at z>0.5 have found lower metallicities than are seen locally,
constraints on the low mass evolution have been slower to develop. Yet it
is at low masses that the effects of star formation feedback are the
strongest, and observations have the most leverage to test theoretical
models. Emission-line surveys from both ground and space have begun to
remedy this shortcoming. I will present
new measurements of the mass-metallicity relation in low mass galaxies at
both intermediate and high redshifts. With these data, we make new, robust
tests for evolution of the mass-metallicity-SFR plane at high redshifts and
low masses. Finally, I will show how these observations can be used to test
theoretical models where gas inflow, outflow, and star formation form an
equilibrium.