Environmental dependence of the Mass-Metallicity Star Formation Relations at z=4-10 with JWST

Abstract

We study how environment affects the mass-metallicity relation (MZR) at z=4-10 using deep imaging and spectroscopy from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Combining CEERS and JADES, we compile a sample of 225 galaxies with stellar masses, star-formation rates, and gas-phase metallicities. We characterize environment using the projected fifth-nearest-neighbour surface density, 5, within z=0.25. At 4.5<z<7, we find that galaxies in dense regions are more metal-rich at fixed M by 0.1-0.2 dex, while the slopes of the MZR remain similar across environments. Including SFR increases the separation, suggesting more efficient chemical enrichment in overdense regions. Compared to the local Te-based FMR, our full sample lies 0.2-0.3 dex below the z0 relation, with a smaller deficit in overdense environments. We also examine how metallicity relates to galaxy size using NIRCam-based effective radii. Metallicity increases weakly with size up to Re1 kpc and then flattens, with only a modest residual trend at fixed M and little environmental dependence. Using mass-weighted stellar ages at 5<z<10, we find a positive age-metallicity relation in both environments, steeper in the field. Finally, we find that the star-formation rate density is higher in overdense regions at z6-9 by a factor of 2-3. Overall, our results suggest that environment accelerates both star formation and chemical enrichment during the epoch of reionization. Future wide-area JWST spectroscopy, combined with ALMA and Euclid, will better constrain the role of environment in early galaxy evolution.

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