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Molecular hydrogen and the nature of damped Lyman-alpha systems

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 Added by Patrick Petitjean
 Publication date 2000
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We report results from our mini-survey for molecular hydrogen in eight high redshift damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems using the ESO Ultra-violet and Visible Spectrograph on the VLT. In addition, we investigate two systems using ESO public data. We include in the sample the only system where H2 was previously detected and studied at high-spectral resolution. Altogether our sample consists of eleven absorbers with 1.85<z_abs<3.4. We confirm the presence of H2 in the z_abs = 2.3377, metal-poor ([Si/H] = -1.20) system toward PKS 1232+082. The derived molecular fraction, f = 2N(H2)/(2N(H2)+N(HI)) = 4 10-4, is two orders of magnitude less than what has been claimed previously from low-resolution data. The physical conditions within the cloud can be constrained directly from observation. The kinetic temperature and particle density are in the ranges, respectively, 100<T<300 K and 30<nH<50 cm-3. In addition, UV pumping is of the same order of magnitude than in our Galaxy. The upper limits on the molecular fraction derived in nine of the systems are in the range 1.2 10-7 - 1.6 10-5. The molecular abundance in a few DLA systems (and in particular in the two systems where H2 is detected) is consistent with what is seen in the Magellanic clouds. But most of the DLA measurements are well below these values. This is probably partly due to small amounts of dust and/or high UV flux. We argue however that the lack of molecules is a direct consequence of high kinetic temperature (T>3000 K) implying a low formation rate of H2 onto dust grains. Therefore, most of the DLA systems arise in warm and diffuse neutral gas. (Abridged)



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We have searched for molecular hydrogen in damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) and sub-DLA systems at z>1.8 using UVES at the VLT. Out of the 33 systems in our sample, 8 have firm and 2 have tentative detections of associated H2 absorption lines. Considering that 3 detections were already known from past searches, H2 is detected in 13 to 20 percent of the newly-surveyed systems. We report new detections of molecular hydrogen at z=2.087 and 2.595 toward, respectively, Q 1444+014 and Q 0405-443, and also reanalyse the system at z=3.025 toward Q 0347-383. We find that there is a correlation between metallicity and depletion factor in both our sample and also the global population of DLA systems (60 systems in total). The DLA and sub-DLA systems where H2 is detected are usually amongst those having the highest metallicities and the largest depletion factors. Moreover, the individual components where H2 is detected have depletion factors systematically larger than other components in the profiles. In two different systems, one of the H2-detected components even has [Zn/Fe]>=1.4. These are the largest depletion factors ever seen in DLA systems. All this clearly demonstrates the presence of dust in a large fraction of the DLA systems. The mean H2 molecular fraction is generally small in DLA systems and similar to what is observed in the Magellanic Clouds. From 58 to 75 percent of the DLA systems have log f<-6. This can be explained if the formation rate of H2 onto dust grains is reduced in those systems, probably because the gas is warm (T>1000 K) and/or the ionizing flux is enhanced relative to what is observed in our Galaxy.
73 - Sihan Yuan 2015
Utilizing the high-resolution, large-scale LAOZI cosmological simulations we investigate the nature of the metal-poor (${rm [Z/H]<-2}$) damped Lyman alpha systems (mpDLA) at $z=3$. The following physical picture of mpDLAs emerges. The majority of mpDLAs inhabit regions $ge 20$~kpc from the host galaxy center on infalling cold gas streams originating from the intergalactic medium, with infall velocity of $sim 100$ km/s and temperature of $sim 10^{4}$ K. For each host galaxy, on average, about $1%$ of the area within a radius $150$~kpc is covered by mpDLAs. The mpDLAs are relatively diffuse ($n_{rm{gas}} sim 10^{-2}$ cm$^{-3}$), Jeans quasi-stable, and have very low star formation rate ($dot{Sigma} le 10^{-4} M_{odot} rm{ yr}^{-1} rm{ kpc}^{-2}$). As mpDLAs migrate inward to the galaxy center, they mix with high metallicity gas and stellar outflows in the process, removing themselves from the metal-poor category and rendering the central ($le 5$ kpc) regions of galaxies devoid of mpDLAs. Thus, the central regions of the host galaxies are populated by mostly metal-rich DLAs instead of mpDLAs. All observables of the simulated mpDLAs are in excellent agreement with observations, except the gas density, which is about a factor of ten lower than the value inferred observationally. However, the observationally inferred value is based on simplified assumptions that are not borne out in the simulations.
125 - C. Ledoux ESO 2006
We present the direct detection of molecular hydrogen at the highest redshift known today (z_abs=4.224) in a Damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) system toward the quasar PSS J1443+2724. This absorber is remarkable for having one of the highest metallicities amongst DLA systems at z_abs>3, with a measured iron abundance relative to Solar of -1.12+/-0.10. We provide for the first time in this system accurate measurements of NI, MgII, SII and ArI column densities. The sulfur and nitrogen abundances relative to Solar, -0.63+/-0.10 and -1.38+/-0.10 respectively, correspond exactly to the primary nitrogen production plateau. H2 absorption lines are detected in four different rotational levels (J=0, 1, 2 and 3) of the vibrational ground-state in three velocity components with total column densities of log N(H2)=17.67, 17.97, 17.48 and 17.26 respectively. The J=4 level is tentatively detected in the strongest component with log N(H2)~14. The mean molecular fraction is log f=-2.38+/-0.13, with f=2N(H2)/(2N(H2)+N(HI)). We also measure log N(HD)/N(H2)<-4.2. The excitation temperatures T_{01} for the two main components of the system are 96 and 136 K respectively. We argue that the absorbing galaxy, whose star-formation activity must have started at least 2-5x10^8 yrs before z=4.224, is in a quiescent state at the time of observation. The density of the gas is small, n_H<=50 cm^{-3}, and the temperature is of the order of T~90-180 K. The high excitation of neutral carbon in one of the components can be explained if the temperature of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation has the value expected at the absorber redshift, T=14.2 K.
We study the dust depletion pattern in eight well separated components of the z=1.973, logN(HI)=20.83, damped Lyman-alpha system toward Q0013-004, four of which have detectable H2 absorption. The apparent correlation between the abundance ratios [Fe/S] and [Si/S] in the components indicates that the abundance pattern is indeed due to dust-depletion. In particular, we find evidence for depletion similar to what is observed in cold gas of the Galactic disk ([Fe/Zn]=-1.59, Fe/S=-1.74, Zn/S=-0.15, [Si/S]=-0.85) in one of the weakest components in which molecular hydrogen is detected with logN(H2)=16.5. This is the first time such a large depletion is seen in a DLA system. This observation supports the possibility that current samples of DLA systems might be biased against the presence of cold and dusty gas along the line of sight. The overall metallicities of this peculiar DLA system in which OI and CII are spread over 1050 km/s are [P/H]=-0.64, [Zn/H]=-0.74 and [S/H]=-0.82 relative to solar. The sub-DLA system at z=1.96753 has [P/H]>0.06, [Zn/H]>-0.02 and [S/H]>-0.18. The overall molecular fraction is in the range -2.7<logf<-0.6. CO is not detected (logN(CO)/N(HI)<-8) and HD could be present at z=1.97380. We show that the presence of H2 is closely related to the physical conditions of the gas: high particle density together with low temperature. The observed excitation of high J H2 levels and the molecular fraction show large variations from one component to the other suggesting that the UV radiation field is highly inhomogeneous throughout the system. Gas pressure, estimated from CI absorptions, is larger than what is observed in the ISM of our Galaxy. All this is probably a consequence of intense star-formation activity in the vicinity of the absorbing gas. (Abridged)
We have identified a metal-strong (logN(Zn+) > 13.15 or logN(Si+) > 15.95) DLA (MSDLA) population from an automated quasar (QSO) absorber search in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 3 (SDSS-DR3) quasar sample, and find that MSDLAs comprise ~5% of the entire DLA population with z_abs > 2.2 found in QSO sightlines with r < 19.5. We have also acquired 27 Keck ESI follow-up spectra of metal-strong candidates to evaluate our automated technique and examine the MSDLA candidates at higher resolution. We demonstrate that the rest equivalent widths of strong ZnII 2026 and SiII 1808 lines in low-resolution SDSS spectra are accurate metal-strong indicators for higher-resolution spectra, and predict the observed equivalent widths and signal-to-noise ratios needed to detect certain extremely weak lines with high-resolution instruments. We investigate how the MSDLAs may affect previous studies concerning a dust-obscuration bias and the N(HI)-weighted cosmic mean metallicity <Z(z)>. Finally, we include a brief discussion of abundance ratios in our ESI sample and find that underlying mostly Type II supernovae enrichment are differential depletion effects due to dust (and in a few cases quite strong); we present here a handful of new Ti and Mn measurements, both of which are useful probes of depletion in DLAs. Future papers will present detailed examinations of particularly metal-strong DLAs from high-resolution KeckI/HIRES and VLT/UVES spectra.
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