Misc,

Nitrogen Abundances in Damped Ly-alpha Absorbers

, , , , , and .
(2014)cite arxiv:1401.8221Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Metal Production and Distribution in a Hierarchical Universe - Conference.

Abstract

Nitrogen is thought to have both primary and secondary origins depending on whether the seed carbon and oxygen are produced by the star itself (primary) or already present in the interstellar medium (secondary) from which star forms. DLA and sub-DLA systems with typical metallicities of -3.0<Z/Z_sun<-0.5 are excellent tools to study nitrogen production. We made a search for nitrogen in the ESO-UVES advanced data products (EUADP) database. In the EUADP database, we find 10 new measurements and 9 upper limits of nitrogen. We further compiled DLA/sub-DLA data from the literature with estimates available of nitrogen and alpha-elements. This yields a total of 98 systems, i.e. the largest nitrogen abundance sample investigated so far. In agreement with previous studies, we indeed find a bimodal N/alpha behaviour: three-quarter systems show a mean value of N/alpha=-0.87 with a scatter of 0.21 dex and one-quarter shows ratios clustered at N/alpha=-1.43 with a lower dispersion of 0.13 dex. The high N/alpha group is consistent with the blue compact dwarves and dwarf irregular galaxies, suggesting primary nitrogen production. The low N/alpha group is the lowest ever observed in any astrophysical site and probably provides an evidence of the primary production by fast rotating massive stars in young sites. Moreover, we find a transition between the two N/alpha groups around N/H=-2.5. The transition is not abrupt and there are a few systems lying in the transition region. Additional observations of DLAs/sub-DLAs below N/H<-2.5 would provide more clues.

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