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Strong Clustering of High-Redshift Lyman-alpha Forest Absorption Systems

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 Publication date 1996
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We use new observations of very weak CIV absorption lines associated with high-redshift Lyman-alpha absorption systems to measure the high-redshift Lyman-alpha line two-point correlation function (TPCF). These very weak CIV absorption lines trace small-scale velocity structure that cannot be resolved by Lyman-alpha absorption lines. We find that (1) high-redshift Lyman-alpha absorption systems with N(HI) > 3.10^14 cm^{-2} are strongly clustered in redshift, (2) previous measurements of the Lyman-alpha line TPCF underestimated the actual clustering of the absorbers due to unresolved blending of overlapping velocity components, (3) the present observations are consistent with the hypothesis that clustering of Lyman-alpha absorption systems extends to lower column densities, but maybe with smaller amplitude in the correlation function, and (4) the observed clustering is broadly compatible with that expected for galaxies at z sim 2-3. We interpret these results as suggesting that many or most Lyman-alpha absorbers may arise in galaxies even at high redshifts, and, therefore, that the Lyman-alpha forest probes processes of galaxy formation and evolution for redshifts lesssim 5.



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We provide an analytical description of the line broadening of HI absorbers in the Lyman-alpha forest resulting from Doppler broadening and Jeans smoothing. We demonstrate that our relation captures the dependence of the line-width on column density for narrow lines in z~3 mock spectra remarkably well. Broad lines at a given column density arise when the underlying density structure is more complex, and such clustering is not captured by our model. Our understanding of the line broadening opens the way to a new method to characterise the thermal state of the intergalactic medium and to determine the sizes of the absorbing structures.
We present composite spectra constructed from a sample of 242,150 Lyman-alpha (Lya) forest absorbers at redshifts 2.4<z<3.1 identified in quasar spectra from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) as part of Data Release 9 of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III. We select forest absorbers by their flux in bins 138 km/s wide (approximately the size of the BOSS resolution element). We split these absorbers into five samples spanning the range of flux -0.05 < F<0.45. Tests on a smaller sample of high-resolution spectra show that our three strongest absorption bins would probe circumgalactic regions (projected separation < 300 proper kpc and |Delta v| < 300km/s) in about 60% of cases for very high signal-to-noise ratio. Within this subset, weakening Lya absorption is associated with decreasing purity of circumgalactic selection once BOSS noise is included. Our weaker two Lya absorption samples are dominated by the intergalactic medium. We present composite spectra of these samples and a catalogue of measured absorption features from HI and 13 metal ionization species, all of which we make available to the community. We compare measurements of seven Lyman series transitions in our composite spectra to single line models and obtain further constraints from their associated excess Lyman limit opacity. This analysis provides results consistent with column densities over the range 14.4 <~ Log (N_HI) <~ 16.45. We compare our measurements of metal absorption to a variety of simple single-line, single-phase models for a preliminary interpretation. Our results imply clumping on scales down to ~30 pc and near-solar metallicities in the circumgalactic samples, while high-ionization metal absorption consistent with typical IGM densities and metallicities is visible in all samples.
168 - N. Kanekar 2009
We have used the Very Long Baseline Array to image 18 quasars with foreground damped Lyman-$alpha$ systems (DLAs) at 327, 610 or 1420 MHz, to measure the covering factor $f$ of each DLA at or near its redshifted HI 21cm line frequency. Including six systems from the literature, we find that none of 24 DLAs at $0.09 < z < 3.45$ has an exceptionally low covering factor, with $f sim 0.45 - 1$ for the 14 DLAs at $z > 1.5$, $f sim 0.41 - 1$ for the 10 systems at $z < 1$, and consistent covering factor distributions in the two sub-samples. The observed paucity of detections of HI 21cm absorption in high-$z$ DLAs thus cannot be explained by low covering factors and is instead likely to arise due to a larger fraction of warm HI in these absorbers.
200 - N. Kanekar 2013
We report results from a programme aimed at investigating the temperature of neutral gas in high-redshift damped Lyman-$alpha$ absorbers (DLAs). This involved (1) HI 21cm absorption studies of a large DLA sample, (2) VLBI studies to measure the low-frequency quasar core fractions, and (3) optical/ultraviolet spectroscopy to determine DLA metallicities and velocity widths. Including literature data, our sample consists of 37 DLAs with estimates of the spin temperature $T_s$ and the covering factor. We find a strong $4sigma$) difference between the $T_s$ distributions in high-z (z>2.4) and low-z (z<2.4) DLA samples. The high-z sample contains more systems with high $T_s$ values, $gtrsim 1000$ K. The $T_s$ distributions in DLAs and the Galaxy are also clearly (~$6sigma$) different, with more high-$T_s$ sightlines in DLAs than in the Milky Way. The high $T_s$ values in the high-z DLAs of our sample arise due to low fractions of the cold neutral medium. For 29 DLAs with metallicity [Z/H] estimates, we confirm the presence of an anti-correlation between $T_s$ and [Z/H], at $3.5sigma$ significance via a non-parametric Kendall-tau test. This result was obtained with the assumption that the DLA covering factor is equal to the core fraction. Monte Carlo simulations show that the significance of the result is only marginally decreased if the covering factor and the core fraction are uncorrelated, or if there is a random error in the inferred covering factor. We also find evidence for redshift evolution in DLA $T_s$ values even for the z>1 sub-sample. Since z>1 DLAs have angular diameter distances comparable to or larger than those of the background quasars, they have similar efficiency in covering the quasars. Low covering factors in high-z DLAs thus cannot account for the observed redshift evolution in spin temperatures. (Abstract abridged.)
We have obtained high signal:to:noise optical spectroscopy at 5AA resolution of 27 quasars from the APM z$>$4 quasar survey. The spectra have been analyzed to create new samples of high redshift Lyman-limit and damped Lyman-$alpha$ absorbers. These data have been combined with published data sets in a study of the redshift evolution and the column density distribution function for absorbers with $log$N(HI)$ge17.5$, over the redshift range 0.01 $<$ z $<$ 5. The main results are: begin{itemize} item Lyman limit systems: The data are well fit by a power law $N(z) = N_0(1 + z)^{gamma}$ for the number density per unit redshift. For the first time intrinsic evolution is detected in the product of the absorption cross-section and comoving spatial number density for an $Omega = 1$ Universe. We find $gamma = 1.55$ ($gamma = 0.5$ for no evolution) and $N_0 = 0.27$ with $>$99.7% confidence limits for $gamma$ of 0.82 & 2.37. item Damped lya systems: The APM QSOs provide a substantial increase in the redshift path available for damped surveys for $z>3$. Eleven candidate and three confirmed damped Ly$alpha$ absorption systems, have been identified in the APM QSO spectra covering the redshift range $2.8le z le 4.4$ (11 with $z>3.5$). Combining the APM survey confirmed and candidate damped lya absorbers with previous surveys, we find evidence for a turnover at z$sim$3 or a flattening at z$sim$2 in the cosmological mass density of neutral gas, $Omega_g$. end{itemize} The Lyman limit survey results are published in Storrie-Lombardi, et~al., 1994, ApJ, 427, L13. Here we describe the results for the DLA population of absorbers.
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