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We present the results of a systematic search for molecular hydrogen (H2) in low redshift ($ 0.05 lesssim z lesssim 0.7$) DLAs and sub-DLAs with $N(HI) gtrsim 10^{19.0}$ cm$^{-2}$, in the archival HST/COS spectra. Our core sample is comprised of 27 systems with a median $log N(HI) = 19.6$. On the average, our survey is sensitive down to $log N(H2) = 14.4$ corresponding to a molecular fraction of $log f_{H2} = -4.9$ at the median $N(HI)$. H2 is detected in 10 cases (3/5 DLAs and 7/22 sub-DLAs) down to this $f_{H2}$ limit. The H2 detection rate of $50^{+25}_{-12}$ percent seen in our sample, is a factor of $gtrsim 2$ higher than that of the high-$z$ sample of Noterdaeme et al. (2008), for systems with $N(H2) > 10^{14.4}$ cm$^{-2}$. In spite of having $N(HI)$ values typically lower by a factor of 10, low-$z$ H2 systems show molecular fractions ($log f_{H2}=-1.93pm0.63$) that are comparable to the high-$z$ sample. The rotational excitation temperatures ($T_{01} = 133pm55$ K), as measured in our low-$z$ sample, are typically consistent with high-$z$ measurements. Simple photoionization models favour a radiation field much weaker than the mean Galactic ISM field for a particle density in the range 10 - 100 cm$^{-3}$. The impact parameters of the identified host-galaxy candidates are in the range $10 lesssim rho$ (kpc) $lesssim 80$. We, therefore, conjecture that the low-$z$ H2 bearing gas is not related to star-forming disks but stems from self-shielded, tidally stripped or ejected disk-material in the extended halo.
Quasar absorbers provide a powerful observational tool with which to probe both galaxies and the intergalactic medium up to high redshift. We present a study of the evolution of the column density distribution, f(N,z), and total neutral hydrogen mass
We present the first search for galaxy counterparts of intervening high-z (2<z< 3.6) sub-DLAs and DLAs towards GRBs. Our final sample comprises of five intervening sub-DLAs and DLAs in four GRB fields. To identify candidate galaxy counterparts of the
Determining the spatial distribution and intrinsic physical properties of neutral hydrogen on cosmological scales is one of the key goals of next-generation radio surveys. We use the EAGLE galaxy formation simulations to assess the properties of damp
Measuring rest-frame ultraviolet rotational transitions from the Lyman and Werner bands in absorption against a bright background continuum is one of the few ways to directly measure molecular hydrogen (H2). Here we report the detection of Lyman-Wern
We use simple models of the spatial structure of the quasar broad line region (BLR) to investigate the properties of so-called ghostly damped Lyman-{alpha} (DLA) systems detected in SDSS data. These absorbers are characterized by the presence of stro