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arxiv: 1303.5987 · v2 · pith:RSPX4RAOnew · submitted 2013-03-24 · 🌌 astro-ph.CO

The Chemical Evolution of Star-Forming Galaxies Over the Last 11 Billion Years

classification 🌌 astro-ph.CO
keywords evolutiongalaxiesmass-metallicityrelationstellarlimitmassempirical
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We calculate the stellar mass-metallicity relation at five epochs ranging to z~2.3. We quantify evolution in the shape of the mass-metallicity relation as a function of redshift; the mass-metallicity relation flattens at late times. There is an empirical upper limit to the gas-phase oxygen abundance in star-forming galaxies that is independent of redshift. From examination of the mass-metallicity relation and its observed scatter we show that the flattening at late times is a consequence of evolution in the stellar mass where galaxies enrich to this empirical upper metallicity limit; there is also evolution in the fraction of galaxies at a fixed stellar mass that enrich to this limit. The stellar mass where metallicities begin to saturate is ~0.7 dex smaller in the local universe than it is at z~0.8.

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