posted on 2024-08-06, 11:39authored byHenry Poetrodjojo, Brent Groves, Lisa J. Kewley, Anne M. Medling, Sarah Sweet, Jesse van de Sande, Sebastian F. Sanchez, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Sarah Brough, Julia J. Bryant, Luca Cortese, Scott M. Croom, Ángel R. López-Sánchez, Samuel N. Richards, Tayyaba Zafar, Jon S. Lawrence, Nuria P.F. Lorente, Matt S. Owers, Nicholas Scott
We present gas-phasemetallicity and ionization parameter maps of 25 star-forming face-on spiral galaxies from the SAMI Galaxy Survey Data Release 1. Self-consistent metallicity and ionization parameter maps are calculated simultaneously through an iterative process to account for the interdependence of the strong emission line diagnostics involving ([O II]+[O III])/Hβ (R23) and [O III]/[O II](O32). The maps are created on a spaxel-by-spaxel basis because HII regions are not resolved at the SAMI spatial resolution. We combine the SAMI data with stellar mass, star formation rate (SFR), effective radius (Re), ellipticity, and position angles (PA) from the GAMA survey to analyse their relation to the metallicity and ionization parameter. We find a weak trend of steepening metallicity gradient with galaxy stellar mass, with values ranging from -0.03 to -0.20 dex/Re. Only two galaxies show radial gradients in the ionization parameter. We find that the ionization parameter has no significant correlation with either SFR, sSFR (specific SFR), or metallicity. For several individual galaxies, we find the structure in the ionization parameter maps suggestive of spiral arm features. We find a typical ionization parameter range of 7.0 < log (q) < 7.8 for our galaxy sample with no significant overall structure. An ionization parameter range of this magnitude is large enough to caution the use of metallicity diagnostics that have not considered the effects of a varying ionization parameter distribution.
Funding
Hector: a revolutionary survey machine to discover how galaxies formed
The impact of impact: what stops star formation in cluster galaxies? This project aims to explain the fundamental differences observed in the star forming properties of galaxies in high and low density environments