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Issue A&A
Volume 447, Number 1, February III 2006
Page(s) 113 - 119
Section Extragalactic astronomy
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20053821

A&A 447, 113-119 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053821

Significant evolution of the stellar mass-metallicity relation since z ~ 0.65

Y. C. Liang1, 2, F. Hammer2 and H. Flores2

1  National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 20A Datun Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100012, PR China
    e-mail: ycliang@bao.ac.cn
2  GEPI, Observatoire de Paris-Meudon, 92195 Meudon, France

(Received 13 July 2005 / Accepted 21 September 2005)

Abstract
We present the stellar mass-metallicity relation for 34 0.4 < z < 1 galaxies selected from CFRS and Marano fields, and compare it to those derived from three local samples of galaxies (NFGS, KISS and SDSS). Our metal abundance estimates account for extinction effects, as estimated from IR/optical ratios and Balmer line ratios. All three comparisons show that the intermediate mass galaxies at $z\sim 0.65$ are more metal-deficient by 0.3 dex at a given MK or stellar mass relative to z=0. We find no evidence that this discrepancy could be related to different methods used to derive mass and metallicity. Assuming a closed box model predicts a gas fraction converted into stars of 20-25% since $z\sim 0.65$, if the gas fraction is 10-20% in present-day galaxies with intermediate masses. This result is in excellent agreement with previous findings that most of the decline of the cosmic star formation density is related to the population of intermediate mass galaxies, which is composed of 75% spirals today. We find no evidence for a change of the slope of the $M_{\rm star}$-Z relation from $z\sim 0.65$ to z=0 within the intermediate mass range ( $10.5 < \log\,(M_{\star}) < 11.5$).


Key words: galaxies: abundances -- galaxies: evolution -- galaxies: ISM -- galaxies: spiral -- galaxies: starburst -- galaxies: stellar content

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© ESO 2006


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