Extremely metal-poor galaxies with HST/COS: laboratories for models of low-metallicity massive stars and high-redshift galaxies
Abstract
Ultraviolet (UV) observations of local star-forming galaxies have begun to establish an empirical baseline for interpreting the rest-UV spectra of reionization-era galaxies. However, existing high-ionization emission line measurements at z>6 (WC IV, 0 20 ) are uniformly stronger than observed locally (WC IV, 0 2 ), likely due to the relatively high metallicities (Z/Z > 0.1) typically probed by UV surveys of nearby galaxies. We present new HST/COS spectra of six nearby (z<0.01) extremely metal-poor galaxies (XMPs, Z/Z 0.1) targeted to address this limitation and provide constraints on the highly-uncertain ionizing spectra powered by low-metallicity massive stars. Our data reveal a range of spectral features, including one of the most prominent nebular C IV doublets yet observed in local star-forming systems and strong He II emission. Using all published UV observations of local XMPs to-date, we find that nebular C IV emission is ubiquitous in very high specific star formation rate systems at low metallicity, but still find equivalent widths smaller than those measured in individual lensed systems at z>6. Our moderate-resolution HST/COS data allow us to conduct an analysis of the stellar winds in a local nebular C IV emitter, which suggests that some of the tension with z>6 data may be due to existing local samples not yet probing sufficiently high α/Fe abundance ratios. Our results indicate that C IV emission can play a crucial role in the JWST and ELT era by acting as an accessible signpost of very low metallicity (Z/Z < 0.1) massive stars in assembling reionization-era systems.
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