Abstract

The gas-phase and stellar metallicities have proven to be important parameters to constrain the star formation history of galaxies. However, HII regions associated with recent star-formation may not have abundances typical for the galaxy as a whole and it is believed that the bulk of the metals may be contained in the neutral gas. It is therefore important to directly probe the metal abundances in the neutral gas, which can be done by using absorption lines imprinted on a background quasar. Recently, we have presented studies of the stellar content of a small sample of such quasar absorbers with HI column densities measured to be in the sub-Damped Lyman-alpha to Damped Lyman-alpha range. Here, we present observations covering 300 nm to 2.5 microns of emission line spectra of three of these absorbing-galaxies using the long-slit spectrograph X-Shooter on the VLT. This allows us to compare the neutral and ionised phase metallicities in the same objects and relates these measures to possible signature of low-metallicity gas accretion or outflows of gas enriched by star formation. Our results suggest that the abundances derived in absorption along the line-of-sight to background quasars are reliable measures of the overall galaxy metallicities. In addition to a comparison of abundances in different phases of the gas, a potential observational consequence of differences in fueling mechanisms for disc galaxies is the internal distribution of their chemical abundances. We present some evidence for small negative metallicity gradients in the three systems. The flat slopes are in line with the differences observed between the two phases of the gas. These results suggest that a comparison of the HI and HII metallicities is a robust indicator of abundance gradients in high-redshift galaxies and do not favour the presence of infall of fresh gas in these objects.

Highlights

  • Estimating the amount of metals in galaxies and the cosmological evolution of this quantity is a key measure in the study of the formation of galaxies

  • Our results suggest that the abundances derived in absorption along the line-of-sight to background quasars are reliable measures of the overall galaxy metallicities

  • The flat slopes are in line with the differences observed between the two phases of the gas

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Note: aSIMBAD coordinates except for the quasar which is part of SDSS, in which case the SDSS name is provided. We use absorption lines tracing the neutral gas at small impact parameter from previous high-resolution observations to probe for metallicity of the neutral gas in the same systems and the amount of depletion due to dust in this phase. This allows us to compare metallicities in the neutral and ionised phases in the same objects, to study the spatial distribution of metals and relate these measures to possible signatures of low-metallicity gas accretion or outflows of gas enriched by star formation. Throughout this paper, we assume a cosmology with H0=71 km/s/Mpc, ΩM =0.27 and ΩΛ=0.73

OBSERVATIONS AND DATA REDUCTION
Integrated Neutral Phase Metallicity
Emission Line Measurements
H ii Abundances
AGN Contamination
Internal Gradients
Element Ratio
Balmer Decrement
Quasar Reddening
CONCLUSION
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