Stars At a given mass and age, a metal-poor star will be slightly warmer. metallicities are roughly to of the Sun's \left(\ \left[ \tfrac{ \ce{Fe} }{ \ce{H} } \right]\ = {-3.0}\ ...\ {-1.0}\ \right)\ , but the group appears cooler than overall, as heavy population II stars have long since died. Above 40
solar masses, metallicity influences how a star will die: Outside the
pair-instability window, lower metallicity stars will collapse directly to a black hole, while higher metallicity stars undergo a
type Ib/c supernova and may leave a
neutron star.
Relationship between stellar metallicity and planets A star's metallicity measurement is one parameter that helps determine whether a star may have a giant
planet, as there is a direct correlation between metallicity and the presence of a giant planet. Measurements have demonstrated the connection between a star's metallicity and
gas giant planets, like
Jupiter and
Saturn. The more metals in a star and thus its
planetary system and
protoplanetary disk, the more likely the system may have gas giant planets. Current models show that the metallicity along with the correct planetary system temperature and distance from the star are key to planet and
planetesimal formation. For two stars that have equal age and mass but different metallicity, the less metallic star is
bluer. Among stars of the same color, less metallic stars emit more ultraviolet radiation. The Sun, with
eight planets and nine consensus
dwarf planets, is used as the reference, with a \ \left[\tfrac{ \ce{Fe} }{ \ce{H} } \right]\ of 0.00.
H II regions Young, massive and hot stars (typically of spectral types
O and
B) in
H II regions emit
UV photons that ionize
ground-state hydrogen atoms, knocking
electrons free; this process is known as
photoionization. The free electrons can
strike other atoms nearby, exciting bound metallic electrons into a
metastable state, which eventually decay back into a ground state, emitting photons with energies that correspond to
forbidden lines. Through these transitions, astronomers have developed several observational methods to estimate metal abundances in H II regions, where the stronger the forbidden lines in spectroscopic observations, the higher the metallicity. These methods are dependent on one or more of the following: the variety of asymmetrical densities inside H II regions, the varied temperatures of the embedded stars, and/or the electron density within the ionized region. Theoretically, to determine the total abundance of a single element in an H II region, all transition lines should be observed and summed. However, this can be observationally difficult due to variation in line strength. Some of the most common forbidden lines used to determine metal abundances in H II regions are from
oxygen (e.g. [O] = (3727, 7318, 7324) Å, and [O] = (4363, 4959, 5007) Å),
nitrogen (e.g. [N] = (5755, 6548, 6584) Å), and
sulfur (e.g. [S] = (6717, 6731) Å and [S] = (6312, 9069, 9531) Å) in the
optical spectrum, and the [O] = (52, 88) μm and [N] = 57 μm lines in the
infrared spectrum.
Oxygen has some of the stronger, more abundant lines in H II regions, making it a main target for metallicity estimates within these objects. To calculate metal abundances in H II regions using oxygen
flux measurements, astronomers often use the 23 method, in which R_{23} = \frac{\ \left[\ \ce{O}^\ce{II} \right]_{3727~\AA} + \left[\ \ce{O}^\ce{III} \right]_{4959~\AA + 5007~\AA}\ }{\left[\ \ce{ H}_\ce{\beta} \right]_{4861 ~\AA} }\ , where \ \left[\ \ce{O}^\ce{II} \right]_{3727~\AA} + \left[\ \ce{O}^\ce{III} \right]_{4959~\AA + 5007~\AA}\ is the sum of the fluxes from oxygen
emission lines measured at the
rest frame = (3727, 4959 and 5007) Å wavelengths, divided by the flux from the
Balmer series H emission line at the rest frame = 4861 Å wavelength. This ratio is well defined through models and observational studies, but caution should be taken, as the ratio is often degenerate, providing both a low and high metallicity solution, which can be broken with additional line measurements. Similarly, other strong forbidden line ratios can be used, e.g. for sulfur, where S_{23} = \frac{\ \left[\ \ce{S}^\ce{II} \right]_{6716~\AA + 6731~\AA} + \left[\ \ce{S}^\ce{III} \right]_{9069~\AA + 9532~\AA}\ }{\left[\ \ce{H}_\ce{\beta} \right]_{4861 ~\AA} } ~. Metal abundances within H II regions are typically less than 1%, with the percentage decreasing on average with distance from the
Galactic Center.
Metallicity calibrations at high redshift The strong line methods that are described above were primarily calibrated on low-redshift galaxy samples. The
James Webb Space Telescope (
JWST) and its
Near Infrared Spectrograph (
NIRSpec) has enabled the measurement of spectroscopic metallicity at redshifts z ~ 4-10, which corresponds to the first two billion years of the cosmic timeline. Most emission line ratios change substantially with redshift. This is due to a systematic increase in the ionization parameter of the interstellar medium in early galaxies. Because of this, applying typical z \approx 0 calibrations to high-redshift spectra can bias oxygen abundance estimates downward by up to 1 dex. Deep observations with the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES) looked at galaxies with z values between 3-10, including low-mass systems (\log(\ M_\star/\ M_\odot)\lesssim 8) that had been unobservable from ground-based facilities. ==See also==