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Quasar (QSO) elemental abundances provide unique probes of high-redshift star formation and galaxy evolution. There is growing evidence from both the emission and intrinsic absorption lines that QSO environments have roughly solar or higher metallicities out to redshifts >4. The range is not well known, but solar to a few times solar metallicity appears to be typical. There is also evidence for higher metallicities in more luminous objects and for generally enhanced N/C and Fe/α abundances compared with solar ratios.
These results identify QSOs with vigorous, high-redshift star
formation—consistent with the early evolution of massive galactic nuclei
or dense protogalactic clumps. However, the QSOs offer new constraints. For
example, (a) most of the enrichment and star formation must occur before
the QSOs “turn on” or become observable, on time scales of
1 Gyr at least at the highest redshifts. (b) The tentative result for
enhanced Fe/α suggests that the first local star formation began at least
∼1 Gyr before the QSO epoch. (c) The star formation must ultimately
be extensive to reach high metallicities; that is, a substantial fraction of
the local gas must be converted into stars and stellar remnants. The exact
fraction depends on the shape of the initial mass function (IMF). (d)
The highest derived metallicities require IMFs that are weighted slightly more
toward massive stars than in the solar neighborhood. (e) High
metallicities also require deep gravitational potentials. By analogy with the
well-known mass–metallicity relation among low-redshift galaxies,
metal-rich QSOs should reside in galaxies (or protogalaxies) that are minimally
as massive (or as tightly bound) as our own Milky Way.
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