5 research outputs found
A Bare Molecular Cloud at \u3cem\u3ez\u3c/em\u3e ~ 0.45*
Several neutral species (Mg I, Si I, Ca I, Fe I) have been detected in a weak Mg II absorption line system (Wr (2796) ~ 0.15 Å) at z ~ 0.45 along the sightline toward HE0001-2340. These observations require extreme physical conditions, as noted in D\u27Odorico. We place further constraints on the properties of this system by running a wide grid of photoionization models, determining that the absorbing cloud that produces the neutral absorption is extremely dense (~100-1000 cm-3), cold (\u3c 100 K), and has significant molecular content (~72%-94%). Structures of this size and temperature have been detected in Milky Way CO surveys and have been predicted in hydrodynamic simulations of turbulent gas. In order to explain the observed line profiles in all neutral and singly ionized chemical transitions, the lines must suffer from unresolved saturation and/or the absorber must partially cover the broad emission line region of the background quasar. In addition to this highly unusual cloud, three other ordinary weak Mg II clouds (within densities of ~0.005 cm-3 and temperatures of ~10, 000 K) lie within 500 km s-1 along the same sightline. We suggest that the \u27\u27bare molecular cloud,\u27\u27 which appears to reside outside of a galaxy disk, may have had in situ star formation and may evolve into an ordinary weak Mg II absorbing cloud. Based on public data obtained from the ESO archive of observations from the UVES spectrograph at the VLT, Paranal, Chile
The Kinematic Evolution of Strong MgII Absorbers
We consider the evolution of strong (W_r(2796) > 0.3A) MgII absorbers, most
of which are closely related to luminous galaxies. Using 20 high resolution
quasar spectra from the VLT/UVES public archive, we examine 33 strong MgII
absorbers in the redshift range 0.3 < z < 2.5. We compare and supplement this
sample with 23 strong MgII absorbers at 0.4 < z < 1.4 observed previously with
HIRES/Keck. We find that neither equivalent width nor kinematic spread (the
optical depth weighted second moment of velocity) of MgII2796 evolve. However,
the kinematic spread is sensitive to the highest velocity component, and
therefore not as sensitive to additional weak components at intermediate
velocities relative to the profile center. The fraction of absorbing pixels
within the full velocity range of the system does show a trend of decreasing
with decreasing redshift. Most high redshift systems (14/20) exhibit absorption
over the entire system velocity range, which differs from the result for low
redshift systems (18/36) at the 95% level. This leads to a smaller number of
separate subsystems for high redshift systems because weak absorping components
tend to connect the stronger regions of absorption. We hypothesize that low
redshift MgII profiles are more likely to represent well formed galaxies, many
of which have kinematics consistent with a disk/halo structure. High redshift
MgII profiles are more likely to show evidence of complex protogalactic
structures, with multiple accretion or outflow events. Although these results
are derived from measurements of gas kinematics, they are consistent with
hierarchical galaxy formation evidenced by deep galaxy surveys.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journa
Evolution of the Population of Very Strong MgII Absorbers
We present a study of the evolution of several classes of MgII absorbers, and
their corresponding FeII absorption, over a large fraction of cosmic history:
2.3 to 8.7 Gyrs from the Big Bang. Our sample consists of 87 strong
(Wr(MgII)>0.3 A) MgII absorbers, with redshifts 0.2<z<2.5, measured in 81
quasar spectra obtained from the Very Large Telescope(VLT)/Ultraviolet and
Visual Echelle Spectrograph(UVES) archives of high-resolution spectra (R \sim
45,000). No evolutionary trend in Wr(FeII)/Wr(MgII) is found for moderately
strong MgII absorbers (0.3<Wr(MgII)<1.0 A). However, at lower z we find an
absence of very strong MgII absorbers (those with Wr(MgII)>1 A) with small
ratios of equivalent widths of FeII to MgII. At high z, very strong MgII
absorbers with both small and large Wr(FeII)/Wr(MgII) values are present. We
compare our findings to a sample of 100 weak MgII absorbers (Wr(MgII)<0.3 A)
found in the same quasar spectra by Narayanan et al. (2007).
The main effect driving the evolution of very strong MgII systems is the
difference between the kinematic profiles at low and high redshifts. At high z,
we observe that, among the very strong MgII absorbers, all of the systems with
small ratios of Wr(FeII)/Wr(MgII) have relatively large velocity spreads,
resulting in less saturated profiles. At low z, such kinematically spread
systems are absent, and both FeII and MgII are saturated, leading to
Wr(FeII)/Wr(MgII) values that are all close to 1. The high redshift, small
Wr(FeII)/Wr(MgII) systems could correspond to sub-DLA systems, many of which
have large velocity spreads and are possibly linked to superwinds in star
forming galaxies. In addition to the change in saturation due to kinematic
evolution, the smaller Wr(FeII)/Wr(MgII) values could be due to a lower
abundance of Fe at high z, which would indicate relatively early stages of star
formation in those environments.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures (figure 1 is a set of 87 figures, which is
available on the online version), accepted for publication in the MNRA
A Bare Molecular Cloud at z~0.45
Several neutral species (MgI, SiI, CaI, FeI) have been detected in a weak
MgII absorption line system (W_r(2796)~0.15 Angstroms) at z~0.45 along the
sightline toward HE0001-2340. These observations require extreme physical
conditions, as noted in D'Odorico (2007). We place further constraints on the
properties of this system by running a wide grid of photoionization models,
determining that the absorbing cloud that produces the neutral absorption is
extremely dense (~100-1000/cm^3), cold (<100 K), and has significant molecular
content (~72-94%). Structures of this size and temperature have been detected
in Milky Way CO surveys, and have been predicted in hydrodynamic simulations of
turbulent gas. In order to explain the observed line profiles in all neutral
and singly ionized chemical transitions, the lines must suffer from unresolved
saturation and/or the absorber must partially cover the broad emission line
region of the background quasar. In addition to this highly unusual cloud,
three other ordinary weak MgII clouds (within densities of ~0.005/cm^3 and
temperatures of ~10000K) lie within 500 km/s along the same sightline. We
suggest that the "bare molecular cloud", which appears to reside outside of a
galaxy disk, may have had in situ star formation and may evolve into an
ordinary weak MgII absorbing cloud.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables, ApJ accepte
A Bare Molecular Cloud at \u3cem\u3ez\u3c/em\u3e ~ 0.45*
Several neutral species (Mg I, Si I, Ca I, Fe I) have been detected in a weak Mg II absorption line system (Wr (2796) ~ 0.15 Å) at z ~ 0.45 along the sightline toward HE0001-2340. These observations require extreme physical conditions, as noted in D\u27Odorico. We place further constraints on the properties of this system by running a wide grid of photoionization models, determining that the absorbing cloud that produces the neutral absorption is extremely dense (~100-1000 cm-3), cold (\u3c 100 K), and has significant molecular content (~72%-94%). Structures of this size and temperature have been detected in Milky Way CO surveys and have been predicted in hydrodynamic simulations of turbulent gas. In order to explain the observed line profiles in all neutral and singly ionized chemical transitions, the lines must suffer from unresolved saturation and/or the absorber must partially cover the broad emission line region of the background quasar. In addition to this highly unusual cloud, three other ordinary weak Mg II clouds (within densities of ~0.005 cm-3 and temperatures of ~10, 000 K) lie within 500 km s-1 along the same sightline. We suggest that the \u27\u27bare molecular cloud,\u27\u27 which appears to reside outside of a galaxy disk, may have had in situ star formation and may evolve into an ordinary weak Mg II absorbing cloud. Based on public data obtained from the ESO archive of observations from the UVES spectrograph at the VLT, Paranal, Chile