The gas inflow and outflow rate in star-forming galaxies at z1.4
Abstract
We try to constrain the gas inflow and outflow rate of star-forming galaxies at z1.4 by employing a simple analytic model for the chemical evolution of galaxies. The sample is constructed based on a large near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopic sample observed with Subaru/FMOS. The gas-phase metallicity is measured from the [N2]λ6584/Hα emission line ratio and the gas mass is derived from the extinction corrected Hα luminosity by assuming the Kennicutt-Schmidt law. We constrain the inflow and outflow rate from the least-2 fittings of the observed gas mass fraction, stellar mass, and metallicity with the analytic model. The joint 2 fitting shows the best-fit inflow rate is 1.8 and the outflow rate is 0.6 in unit of star-formation rate (SFR). By applying the same analysis to the previous studies at z0 and z2.2, it is shown that the both inflow rate and outflow rate decrease with decreasing redshift, which implies the higher activity of gas flow process at higher redshift. The decreasing trend of the inflow rate from z2.2 to z0 agrees with that seen in the previous observational works with different methods, though the absolute value is generally larger than the previous works. The outflow rate and its evolution from z2.2 to z0 obtained in this work agree well with the independent estimations in the previous observational works.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.