Origins of Extreme Emission-Line Ratios in z > 3 Galaxies: Insights from the Lumen Model
Abstract
Optical emission-line ratios in star-forming galaxies at z 3-8, such as [OIII]/Hβ and [OIII]/[OII], are strongly offset from those at z 0-2, pointing to more extreme ionization and ISM conditions in the early Universe. To constrain the physical origin of these offsets, we developed Lumen, a framework for modelling nebular emission from spatially distributed HII regions in cosmological simulations. We apply Lumen to IllustrisTNG50, validate its predictions at low redshift, and test a suite of proposed mechanisms for producing extreme line ratios at z = 3-8. We focus on the [NII]/Hα versus [OIII]/Hβ (N2-BPT) diagram, the [SII]/Hα versus [OIII]/Hβ (S2-VO87) diagram, and the [OIII]/[OII] versus ([OII]+[OIII])/Hβ (O32-R23) diagram. We find that α-enhancement alone cannot explain the bulk of observations. Moderate offsets emerge from the combined effects of α-enhancement, a higher IMF upper-mass cutoff, and AGN contributions. The most extreme [OIII]/Hβ and [OIII]/[OII] values require high ionization parameters powered by massive star clusters of 105-106\,M, consistent with recent JWST observations. Reproducing the highest [NII]/Hα ratios additionally requires enhanced nitrogen abundances. Although gas densities of n 104\,cm-3 can boost several diagnostic ratios, they suppress [SII]/Hα and are therefore in tension with current observations. Overall, models combining harder ionizing spectra, elevated ionization parameters from massive star clusters, and enhanced nitrogen abundances reproduce the observed high-z galaxy population across the N2-BPT, S2-VO87, and O32-R23 diagrams. This successful model also motivates new demarcation lines for star-forming galaxies in the N2-BPT and S2-VO87 diagrams.
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