Spectroscopy of Galaxies: Evolution of Escape Fractions, Metallicity Gradients and Stellar Metallicity

2019 
We use spectroscopic observations to investigate galaxies from the age of reionization to the peak of star formation, and the local universe. This thesis presents three projects to better understand characteristics of galactic feedback, i.e., how it regulates galactic gas flows. We used deep absorption line spectroscopy to estimate the escape fractions fesc of star-forming gravitationally-lensed galaxies at z ≃ 5. The approach is to measure the covering fraction of neutral hydrogen in a galaxy from the amount of non-ionizing UV radiation absorbed by low-ionization metal species. With the boost of signal by gravitational lensing, we observed four 4 Spatially resolved spectroscopic observations of galaxies at the peak era of star-formation activities are effective in providing insight into the primitive disks. Specifically, we used metallicity gradients to provide constraints on the amount and extent of feedback produced in star-forming galaxies. We observed 15 star-forming galaxies at z ~ 2 with OSIRIS to obtain their kinematic properties and gas-phase metallicity gradients. With helps from AO correction and gravitational lensing, the typical spatial resolution in our study is less than a half-light radius of a typical L* galaxies at z ≃ 2. Combining with the sample in Jones et al., 2013, we approximately tripled the existing metallicity gradient measurements. We found a lower fraction of rotationally-supported systems than reported from larger kinematic surveys with coarser spatial resolution, which might be partially due to a our improved spatial resolution. We demonstrated that a high spatial resolution is crucial for an accurate diagnosis of the kinematic properties and dynamical maturity of z ≃ 2 galaxies. As for metallicity gradients, we found a much higher fraction of z ≃ 2 galaxies having weak or flat metallicity gradients than in previous studies. We correlated the metallicity gradient with the total metallicity and found that all galaxies with low total metallicities have flat gradients ( 0.1), there is a divergence between isolated or rotationally-supported and dynamically-immature systems with the latter showing zero gradients irrespective of the integrated metallicity. The results indicate that relatively strong feedback (e.g. high mass loading factors or high SN energy output) is required in order to explain the majority of the observed flat gradients. In the second part of the thesis, we observed quiescent galaxies at z Lastly, we measured magnesium (Mg) abundances and extended the observed redshift to z ~ 0.55. We found that while the mass-[Fe/H] relation evolves significantly over the observed redshift range, the mass-[Mg/H] relation does not. This is due to the shorter star formation histories of quiescent galaxies at higher redshifts. Fe is mainly produced in Type Ia SN. It has a longer recycling time than Mg, which is mainly produced in core-collapse SN. Using core-collapse SN elements as a metal indicator lessens the complication of delayed recycling time and allows us to effectively use galactic chemical models with instantaneous recycling to quantify average outflows that these galaxies experience over their lifetime. We found that the average mass-loading factor η is a power-law function of galaxy stellar mass, η ∝ M*-0.21±0.09, consistent with the results of other observational methods and with the predictions where outflow is caused by star formation feedback in turbulent disks.
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