CECILIA: Gas-Phase Physical Conditions and Multi-Element Chemistry at Cosmic Noon
Abstract
Galaxies at Cosmic Noon (z2-3) are characterized by rapid star formation that will lead to significant metal enrichment in the interstellar medium (ISM). While much observational evidence suggests that these galaxies are chemically distinct from those in the local Universe, directly measuring the ISM chemistry in large samples of high-z galaxies is only now possible with the observational capabilities of JWST. In this first key paper of the CECILIA program, we present the direct-method physical conditions and multi-element abundances in twenty galaxies at Cosmic Noon. Using a combination of archival Keck/MOSFIRE and new 30-hr NIRSpec spectroscopy, we measure multiple electron gas densities and the temperature structure from the O+ and S2+ ions. We find that ne[O II] and ne[S II] are comparable but elevated with respect to ne in local star-forming galaxies, and the simultaneous Te[O II] and Te[S III] generally agree with photoionization model Te scaling relations. The O abundances in the CECILIA galaxies range from 12+log(O/H)=7.76-8.81 (12-131% solar O/H), representing some of the highest direct-method metallicities and lowest Te (Te[O II]≈6500 K) measured with JWST to date. The CECILIA galaxies exhibit significantly sub-solar S/O and Ar/O a signature of predominant enrichment from core collapse supernovae. The N/O-O/H trends in the CECILIA galaxies generally agree with the abundance trends in local nebulae, but the large scatter in N/O could be sensitive to the star-formation history. The CECILIA observations demonstrate that exceptionally deep JWST spectroscopy can unveil the multi-element ISM abundance patterns in typical high-z galaxies.
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