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QSO Absorption Line Systems

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 Added by Patrick Petitjean
 Publication date 1998
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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It is difficult to describe in a few pages the numerous specific techniques used to study absorption lines seen in QSO spectra and to review even rapidly the field of research based on their observation and analysis. What follows is therefore a pale introduction to the invaluable contribution of these studies to our knowledge of the gaseous component of the Universe and its cosmological evolution. A rich bibliography is given which, although not complete, will be hopefully useful for further investigations. Emphasis will be laid on the impact of this field on the question of the formation and evolution of galaxies.



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225 - Patrick Petitjean 1998
Molecules dominate the cooling function of neutral metal-poor gas at high density. Observation of molecules at high redshift is thus an important tool toward understanding the physical conditions prevailing in collapsing gas. Up to now, detections are sparse because of small filling factor and/or sensitivity limitations. However, we are at an exciting time where new capabilities offer the propect of a systematic search either in absorption using the UV Lyman-Werner H2 bands or in emission using the CO emission lines redshifted in the sub-millimeter.
We investigate the variation of the ratio of the equivalent widths of the FeII$lambda$2600 line to the MgII$lambdalambda$2796,2803 doublet as a function of redshift in a large sample of absorption lines drawn from the JHU-SDSS Absorption Line Catalog. We find that despite large scatter, the observed ratio shows a trend where the equivalent width ratio $mathcal{R}equiv W_{rm FeII}/W_{rm MgII}$ decreases monotonically with increasing redshift $z$ over the range $0.55 le z le 1.90$. Selecting the subset of absorbers where the signal-to-noise ratio of the MgII equivalent width $W_{rm MgII}$ is $ge$3 and modeling the equivalent width ratio distribution as a gaussian, we find that the mean of the gaussian distribution varies as $mathcal{R}propto (-0.045pm0.005)z$. We discuss various possible reasons for the trend. A monotonic trend in the Fe/Mg abundance ratio is predicted by a simple model where the abundances of Mg and Fe in the absorbing clouds are assumed to be the result of supernova ejecta and where the cosmic evolution in the SNIa and core-collapse supernova rates is related to the cosmic star-formation rate. If the trend in $mathcal{R}$ reflects the evolution in the abundances, then it is consistent with the predictions of the simple model.
We have studied a sample of 809 Mg II absorption systems with 1.0 < z_abs < 1.86 in the spectra of SDSS QSOs, with the aim of understanding the nature and abundance of the dust and the chemical abundances in the intervening absorbers. Normalized, composite spectra were derived, for abundance measurements, for the full sample and several sub-samples, chosen on the basis of the line strengths and other absorber and QSO properties. Average extinction curves were obtained for the sub-samples by comparing their geometric mean spectra with those of matching samples of QSOs without absorbers in their spectra. There is clear evidence for the presence of dust in the intervening absorbers. The 2175 A feature is not present in the extinction curves, for any of the sub-samples. The extinction curves are similar to the SMC extinction curve with a rising UV extinction below 2200 A. The absorber rest frame colour excess, E(B-V), derived from the extinction curves, depends on the absorber properties and ranges from < 0.001 to 0.085 for various sub-samples. The column densities of several ions do not show such a correspondingly large variation. The depletion pattern is similar to halo clouds in the Galaxy. Assuming an SMC gas-to-dust ratio we find a trend of increasing abundance with decreasing extinction; systems with N_H I ~ 10^{20} cm^{-2} show solar abundance of Zn. The large velocity spread of strong Mg II systems seems to be mimicked by weak lines of other elements. The ionization of the absorbers, in general appears to be low. QSOs with absorbers are, in general, at least three times as likely to have highly reddened spectra as compared to QSOs without any absorption systems in their spectra.
We present the results of a MgII absorption-line survey using QSO spectra from the SDSS EDR. Over 1,300 doublets with rest equivalent widths greater than 0.3AA and redshifts $0.366 le z le 2.269$ were identified and measured. We find that the $lambda2796$ rest equivalent width ($W_0^{lambda2796}$) distribution is described very well by an exponential function $partial N/partial W_0^{lambda2796} = frac{N^*}{W^*} e^{-frac{W_0}{W^*}}$, with $N^*=1.187pm0.052$ and $W^*=0.702pm0.017$AA. Previously reported power law fits drastically over-predict the number of strong lines. Extrapolating our exponential fit under-predicts the number of $W_0 le 0.3$AA systems, indicating a transition in $dN/dW_0$ near $W_0 simeq 0.3$AA. A combination of two exponentials reproduces the observed distribution well, suggesting that MgII absorbers are the superposition of at least two physically distinct populations of absorbing clouds. We also derive a new redshift parameterization for the number density of $W_0^{lambda2796} ge 0.3$AA lines: $N^*=1.001pm0.132(1+z)^{0.226pm0.170}$ and $W^*=0.443pm0.032(1+z)^{0.634pm 0.097}$AA. We find that the distribution steepens with decreasing redshift, with $W^*$ decreasing from $0.80pm0.04$AA at $z=1.6$ to $0.59pm0.02$AA at $z=0.7$. The incidence of moderately strong MgII $lambda2796$ lines does not show evidence for evolution with redshift. However, lines stronger than $approx 2$AA show a decrease relative to the no-evolution prediction with decreasing redshift for $z lesssim 1$. The evolution is stronger for increasingly stronger lines. Since $W_0$ in saturated absorption lines is an indicator of the velocity spread of the absorbing clouds, we interpret this as an evolution in the kinematic properties of galaxies from moderate to low z.
Results of a careful analysis of the highly ionized absorption systems, observed over the redshift range 2.198--2.2215 in the zem=2.24 HDFS-QSO J2233-606, are presented. Strong OVI and NeVIII absorptions are detected. Most of the lines show signature of partial coverage which varies from species to species. This can be understood if the clouds cover the continuum emission region completely and only a fraction of the broad emission line region. Using photo-ionization models we analyze in more detail the component at zabs = 2.198. Absolute abundances are close to solar but the [N/C] abundance ratio is larger than solar. This result, which is consistent with the analysis of high-z QSO broad emission-lines, confirms the physical association of the absorbing gas with the AGN. The observed column densities of NIV, NV and NeVIII favor a two-zone model for the absorbing region where NeVIII is predominantly produced in the highly ionized zone. It is most likely that in QSO J2233-606, the region producing the NeVIII absorption can not be a warm absorber. One of the Lyalpha absorption lines at zabs = 2.2215 has a flat bottom typical of saturated lines and non-zero residual intensity in the core, consistent with partial coverage. There is no metal-line from this Lyalpha cloud detectable in the spectrum which suggests either large chemical inhomogeneities in the gas or that the gas is very highly ionized. If the latter is true the cloud could have a total hydrogen column density consistent with that of X-ray absorbers. It is therefore of first importance to check whether or not there is an X-ray warm-absorber in front of this QSO.
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