QUANTITATIVE SPECTROSCOPY OF BLUE SUPERGIANT STARS IN THE DISK OF M81: METALLICITY, METALLICITY GRADIENT, AND DISTANCE

The quantitative spectral analysis of low-resolution (~5 [Angstrom]) Keck LRIS spectra of blue supergiants in the disk of the giant spiral galaxy M81 is used to determine stellar effective temperatures, gravities, metallicities, luminosities, interstellar reddening, and a new distance using the flux...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2012-03, Vol.747 (1), p.1-19
Hauptverfasser: KUDRITZKI, Rolf-Peter, URBANEJA, Miguel A, GAZAK, Zachary, BRESOLIN, Fabio, PRZYBILLA, Norbert, GIEREN, Wolfgang, PIETRZYNSKI, Grzegorz
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The quantitative spectral analysis of low-resolution (~5 [Angstrom]) Keck LRIS spectra of blue supergiants in the disk of the giant spiral galaxy M81 is used to determine stellar effective temperatures, gravities, metallicities, luminosities, interstellar reddening, and a new distance using the flux-weighted gravity-luminosity relationship. Substantial reddening and extinction are found with E(B - V) ranging between 0.13 and 0.38 mag and an average value of 0.26 mag. The distance modulus obtained after individual reddening corrections is 27.7 + or - 0.1 mag. The result is discussed with regard to recently measured tip of the red giant branch and Cepheid distances. The metallicities (based on elements such as iron, titanium, magnesium) are supersolar ([approx =]0.2 dex) in the inner disk (R [ ~] 10 kpc) with a shallow metallicity gradient of 0.034 dex kpc super(-1). The comparison with published oxygen abundances of planetary nebulae and metallicities determined through fits of Hubble Space Telescope color-magnitude diagrams indicates a late metal enrichment and a flattening of the abundance gradient over the last 5 Gyr. This might be the result of gas infall from metal-rich satellite galaxies. Combining these M81 metallicities with published blue supergiant abundance studies in the Local Group and the Sculptor Group, a galaxy mass-metallicity relationship based solely on stellar spectroscopic studies is presented and compared with recent studies of Sloan Digital Sky Survey star-forming galaxies.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.1088/0004-637x/747/1/15