Home ContactSitemap CAS中文
About Us
Brief Introduction
History
Directors
Organization
Research Groups
Scientific Progress
Seminars
Colloquia
CAS Members
Experts
Faculty
Research Fields
Center for Astro-geodynamics
Astrophysics Division
DRAST (Division of Radio Astronomy Science and Technology )
High Technology Laboratories

Location: Home>Research>Seminars
The stellar mass - metallicity relation for nearby galaxies
Author:
ArticleSource:
Update time: 2012-05-11
Close
Text Size: A A A
Print

    Title: The stellar mass - metallicity relation for nearby galaxies
   Speaker: Dr. Thomas Marcus Hughes (Kavli Institute Fellow, KIAA)
   Time: May 11th, Friday, 2pm
   Location: middle conference room

Abstract: The observed relationship between stellar mass and metallicity is a useful tool for constraining models of galaxy formation and evolution. However, the mechanisms driving this relation and the role played by the environment, are still not well understood. I will present results from a new study on the role of gas content and environment in shaping this relation, using a magnitude- and volume-limited sample of 260 nearby late-type galaxies in different environments. Combining new estimates of the gas-phase oxygen abundance with ultraviolet to near-infrared photometry and HI 21 cm line observations,  I show that, at fixed stellar mass, galaxies with lower gas fractions typically also possess higher oxygen abundances. We also observe a relationship between gas fraction and metal content, whereby gas-rich galaxies are typically metal-poor. Although some cluster galaxies are gas-deficient objects, statistically the stellar-mass metallicity relation is invariant to the environment, in agreement with recent studies. These results suggest that internal evolutionary processes, rather than environmental effects, play a key role in shaping the stellar mass-metallicity relation.

Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, All Rights Reserved
80 Nandan Road, Shanghai 200030, China
Tel: +86-21-64386191 Email:shao@shao.ac.cn