Carbon and Iron Deficiencies in Quiescent Galaxies at z=1-3 from JWST-SUSPENSE: Implications for the Formation Histories of Massive Galaxies
We present the stellar metallicities and multi-element abundances (C, Mg, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, and Fe) of 15 massive (log $M/M_\odot=10.2-11.2$) quiescent galaxies at z=1-3, derived from ultradeep JWST-SUSPENSE spectra. Compared to quiescent galaxies at z~0, these galaxies exhibit a deficiency of 0.26$\p...
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Zusammenfassung: | We present the stellar metallicities and multi-element abundances (C, Mg, Si,
Ca, Ti, Cr, and Fe) of 15 massive (log $M/M_\odot=10.2-11.2$) quiescent
galaxies at z=1-3, derived from ultradeep JWST-SUSPENSE spectra. Compared to
quiescent galaxies at z~0, these galaxies exhibit a deficiency of 0.26$\pm0.04$
dex in [C/H], 0.16$\pm0.03$ dex in [Fe/H], and 0.07$\pm0.04$ dex in [Mg/H],
implying rapid formation and quenching before significant enrichment from
asymptotic giant branch stars and Type Ia supernovae. Additionally, we find
that galaxies forming at higher redshift consistently show higher [Mg/Fe] and
lower [Fe/H] and [Mg/H], regardless of their observed redshift. The evolution
in [Fe/H] and [C/H] is therefore primarily driven by lower-redshift samples
naturally including galaxies with longer star-formation timescales. In
contrast, the lower [Mg/H] likely reflects earlier-forming galaxies expelling
larger gas reservoirs during their quenching phase. Consequently, the
mass-metallicity relation, primarily reflecting [Mg/H], is somewhat lower at
z=1-3 compared to the lower redshift relation. Finally, we compare our results
to standard stellar population modeling approaches employing solar abundance
patterns and non-parametric star-formation histories (using Prospector). Our
SSP-equivalent ages agree with the mass-weighted ages from Prospector, while
the metallicities disagree significantly. Nonetheless, the metallicities better
reflect [Fe/H] than total [Z/H]. We also find that star-formation timescales
inferred from elemental abundances are significantly shorter than those from
Prospector, and we discuss the resulting implications for the early formation
of massive galaxies. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2407.02556 |