Stellar and Nebular Diagnostics in the Ultraviolet for Star-forming Galaxies

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Authors

Byler, Nell
Dalcanton, Julianne
Conroy, Charlie
D. Johnson, Benjamin
Levesque, Emily
Berg, Danielle A.

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American Astronomical Society

Abstract

There is a long history of using optical emission and absorption lines to constrain the metallicity and ionization parameters of gas in galaxies. However, comparable diagnostics are less well developed for the ultraviolet (UV). Here, we assess the diagnostic potential of both absorption and emission features in the UV and evaluate the diagnostics against observations of local and high-redshift galaxies. We use the Flexible Stellar Population Synthesis (FSPS) nebular emission model of Byler et al., extended to include emission predictions in the UV, to evaluate the metallicity sensitivity of established UV stellar absorption indices and to identify those that include a significant contribution from nebular emission. We present model UV emission-line fluxes as a function of metallicity and ionization parameter, assuming both instantaneous bursts and constant star formation rates. We identify combinations of strong emission lines that constrain metallicity and ionization parameters, including [C III] lambda 1907, CIII] lambda 1909, OIII] lambda l661,1666, SiIII] lambda 1883,1892, CIV lambda 1548,1551, NII] lambda 1750,1752, and Mg II lambda 2796, and we develop UV versions of the canonical "Baldwin Phillips Terlevich" diagram. We quantify the relative contribution from stellar wind emission and nebular line emission to diagnostic line ratios that include the CIV lambda 1548,1551 lines, and we also develop an observationally motivated relationship for N and C enrichment that improves the performance of photoionization models. We summarize the best diagnostic choices and the associated redshift range for low-, mid-, and high-resolution rest-UV spectroscopy in preparation for the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope.

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The Astrophysical Journal

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Free Access via Publisher Site

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Restricted until

2099-12-31