124 research outputs found

    Parsec-scale HI absorption structure in a low-redshift galaxy seen against a Compact Symmetric Object

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    We present global VLBI observations of the 21-cm transition of atomic hydrogen seen in absorption against the radio source J0855+5751. The foreground absorber (SDSS~J085519.05+575140.7) is a dwarf galaxy at zz = 0.026. As the background source is heavily resolved by VLBI, the data allow us to map the properties of the foreground HI gas with a spatial resolution of 2pc. The absorbing gas corresponds to a single coherent structure with an extent >>35pc, but we also detect significant and coherent variations, including a change in the HI optical depth by a factor of five across a distance of ≀\leq6pc. The large size of the structure provides support for the Heiles & Troland model of the ISM, as well as its applicability to external galaxies. The large variations in HI optical depth also suggest that caution should be applied when interpreting TST_S measurements from radio-detected DLAs. In addition, the distorted appearance of the background radio source is indicative of a strong jet-cloud interaction in its host galaxy. We have measured its redshift (zz = 0.54186) using optical spectroscopy on the William Herschel Telescope and this confirms that J0855+5751 is a FRII radio source with a physical extent of <<1kpc and supports the previous identification of this source as a Compact Symmetric Object. These sources often show absorption associated with the host galaxy and we suggest that both HI and OH should be searched for in J0855+5751.Comment: 14 pages and 10 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Signatures of Cool Gas Fueling a Star-Forming Galaxy at Redshift 2.3

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    Galaxies are thought to be fed by the continuous accretion of intergalactic gas, but direct observational evidence has been elusive. The accreted gas is expected to orbit about the galaxy's halo, delivering not just fuel for star-formation but also angular momentum to the galaxy, leading to distinct kinematic signatures. Here we report observations showing these distinct signatures near a typical distant star-forming galaxy where the gas is detected using a background quasar passing 26 kpc from the host. Our observations indicate that gas accretion plays a major role in galaxy growth since the estimated accretion rate is comparable to the star-formation rate.Comment: 33 pages, 8 figures, version matching the proofed tex

    A new measurement of zinc metallicity in a DLA at z=3.35

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    We present chemical abundance measurements in the z_abs=3.35045 Damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) system observed in the UVES spectrum of the BAL quasar BR 1117-1329. We measure a neutral hydrogen column density N(HI)=6.9+/-1.7*10^{20} atoms/cm2 and derive mean abundances relative to solar: [Si/H] = -1.26+/-0.13, [Fe/H]=-1.51+/-0.13, [Ni/H]=-1.57+/-0.13, [Cr/H]=-1.36+/-0.13, [Zn/H]=-1.18+/-0.13, [Al/H]>-1.25, [O/H]>-1.25 and [N/H]3. The iron to zinc and chromium to zinc ratios, [Fe/Zn]=-0.33+/-0.05 and [Cr/Zn]=-0.18+/-0.05 demonstrate that the absorber has a low dust content. The nitrogen ratio [N/Si]<-0.98 suggests that the ``secondary'' N production process is taking place in this DLA. Finally, this absorber does not seem to present a convincing alpha-enhancement as shown by the alpha over Fe-peak element ratios: [Si/Fe]=0.25+/-0.06, [Si/Cr]=0.10+/-0.06 and [Si/Zn]=-0.08+/-0.06

    Evolution of the cosmological mass density of neutral gas from Sloan Digital Sky Survey II - Data Release 7

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    We present the results of a search for damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey II (SDSS), Data Release 7. We use a fully automatic procedure to identify DLAs and derive their column densities. The procedure is checked against the results of previous searches for DLAs in SDSS. We discuss the agreements and differences and show the robustness of our procedure. For each system, we obtain an accurate measurement of the absorber's redshift, the HI column density and the equivalent width of associated metal absorption lines, without any human intervention. We find 1426 absorbers with 2.15 =20, out of which 937 systems have log N(HI)>= 20.3. This is the largest DLA sample ever built, made available to the scientific community through the electronic version of this paper. In the course of the survey, we discovered the intervening DLA with highest HI column density known to date with log N(HI)=22.0+/-0.1. This single system provides a strong constraint on the high-end of the N(HI) frequency distribution now measured with high accuracy. We show that the presence of a DLA at the blue end of a QSO spectrum can lead to important systematic errors and propose a method to avoid them. This has important consequences for the measurement of the cosmological mass density of neutral gas at z~2.2 and therefore on our understanding of galaxy evolution over the past 10 billion years. [truncated]Comment: Accepted for publication in A&

    Hubble Space Telescope Observations of Sub-Damped Lyman-alpha Absorbers at z < 0.5, and Implications for Galaxy Chemical Evolution

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    We report observations of four sub-damped Lyman-alpha (sub-DLA) quasar absorbers at z<0.5 obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Origins Spectrograph. We measure the available neutrals or ions of C, N, O, Si, P, S, Ar, Mn, Fe, and/or Ni. Our data have doubled the sub-DLA metallicity samples at z<0.5 and improved constraints on sub-DLA chemical evolution. All four of our sub-DLAs are consistent with near-solar or super-solar metallicities and relatively modest ionization corrections; observations of more lines and detailed modeling will help to verify this. Combining our data with measurements from the literature, we confirm previous suggestions that the N(HI)-weighted mean metallicity of sub-DLAs exceeds that of DLAs at all redshifts studied, even after making ionization corrections for sub-DLAs. The absorber toward PHL 1598 shows significant dust depletion. The absorbers toward PHL 1226 and PKS 0439-433 show the S/P ratio consistent with solar, i.e., they lack a profound odd-even effect. The absorber toward Q0439-433 shows super-solar Mn/Fe. For several sub-DLAs at z<0.5, [N/S] is below the level expected for secondary N production, suggesting a delay in the release of the secondary N or a tertiary N production mechanism. We constrain the electron density using Si II* and C II* absorption. We also report different metallicity vs. Delta V_90 relations for sub-DLAs and DLAs. For two sub-DLAs with detections of emission lines from the underlying galaxies, our measurements of the absorption-line metallicities are consistent with the emission-line metallicities, suggesting that metallicity gradients are not significant in these galaxies.Comment: 77 pages, 13 figures; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Submitted (in the original form) May 26, 2014; accepted Apr. 15, 201

    The evolution of Ω_(Hi) and the epoch of formation of damped Lyman α absorbers

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    We present a study of the evolution of the column density distribution, f(N, z), and total neutral hydrogen mass in high column density quasar absorbers using candidates from a recent high-redshift survey for damped Lyman α (DLA) and Lyman-limit system (LLS) absorbers. The observed number of LLS [N(H_i) >1.6 × 10^(17) atom cm^(−2)] is used to constrain f(N, z) below the classical DLA definition of 2 × 10^(20) atom cm^(−2). The evolution of the number density of LLS is consistent with our previous work but steeper than previously published work of other authors. At z= 5, the number density of Lyman-limit systems per unit redshift is ∌5, implying that these systems are a major source of ultraviolet (UV) opacity in the high-redshift Universe. The joint LLS–DLA analysis shows unambiguously that f(N, z) deviates significantly from a single power law and that a Γ-law distribution of the form f(N,z) = (f_*/N_*)(N/N_*)^(−ÎČ)exp(−N/N_*) provides a better description of the observations. These results are used to determine the amount of neutral gas contained in DLAs and in systems with lower column density. Whilst in the redshift range 2–3.5, ∌90 per cent of the neutral H i mass is in DLAs, we find that at z > 3.5 this fraction drops to only 55 per cent and that the remaining ‘missing’ mass fraction of the neutral gas lies in sub-DLAs with N(H i) 10^(19)–2 × 10^(20) atom cm^(−2). The characteristic column density, N_*, changes from 1.6 × 10^(21) atom cm^(−2) at z 3.5, supporting a picture where at z > 3.5, we are directly observing the formation of high column density neutral hydrogen DLA systems from lower column density units. Moreover, since current metallicity studies of DLA systems focus on the higher column density systems they may be giving a biased or incomplete view of global galactic chemical evolution at z > 3. After correcting the observed mass in H i for the ‘missing’ neutral gas the comoving mass density now shows no evidence for a decrease above z= 2

    The evolution of Omega(HI) and the epoch of formation of damped Lyman-alpha absorbers

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    We present a study of the evolution of the column density distribution, f(N,z), and total neutral hydrogen mass in high-column density quasar absorbers using candidates from a recent high-redshift survey for damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) and Lyman limit system (LLS) absorbers. The observed number of LLS (N(HI)> 1.6 * 10^{17} atom/cm^2) is used to constrain f(N,z) below the classical DLA Wolfe et al. (1986) definition of 2 * 10^{20} atom/cm^2. The joint LLS-DLA analysis shows unambiguously that f(N,z) deviates significantly from a single power law and that a Gamma-law distribution of the form f(N,z)=(f_*/N_*)(N/N_*)^{-Beta} exp(-N/N_*) provides a better description of the observations. These results are used to determine the amount of neutral gas contained in DLAs and in systems with lower column density. Whilst in the redshift range 2 to 3.5, ~90% of the neutral HI mass is in DLAs, we find that at z>3.5 this fraction drops to only 55% and that the remaining 'missing' mass fraction of the neutral gas lies in sub-DLAs with N(HI) 10^{19} - 2 * 10^{20} atom/cm^2. The characteristic column density, N_*, changes from 1.6 * 10^{21} atom/cm^2 at z3.5, supporting a picture where at z>3.5, we are directly observing the formation of high column density neutral hydrogen DLA systems from lower column density units. Moreover since current metallicity studies of DLA systems focus on the higher column density systems they may be giving a biased or incomplete view of global galactic chemical evolution at z>3. After correcting the observed mass in HI for the ``missing'' neutral gas the comoving mass density now shows no evidence for a decrease above z=2. (abridged)Comment: Replaced to match version published in MNRAS. One figure and appendix added, analysis and conclusions unchange

    A homogeneous sample of sub-damped Lyman α systems — I. Construction of the sample and chemical abundance measurements

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    In this first paper of a series, we report on the use of quasar spectra obtained with the high-resolution Ultraviolet-Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES) and available through the European Southern Observatory (ESO) Very Large Telescope (VLT) archive to build the first homogeneous and unbiased sample of sub-damped Lyman α (sub-DLA) systems, absorbers with Hi column densities >1019 cm−2 but lower than the classical definition of damped Lyman α systems (2 × 1020 cm−2). A systematic investigation of the properties of these systems and a comparison with those of the DLAs (Paper II of this series) is expected to provide new clues on the association of high column density absorbers with galaxies and on the overall evolution of the neutral hydrogen gas mass and metal content in the Universe. In the spectra of 22 quasars which were found suitable for a sub-DLA search, we identified 12 sub-DLAs and one borderline case between the DLA and sub-DLA systems in the redshift interval z= 1.8-4.3. We measured the column densities of Hi and of up to 16 additional ions of low, intermediate and high ionization: Oi, Cii, Civ, Siii, Siiv, Ni, Sii, Mgi, Mgii, Alii, Aliii, Feii, Feiii, Niii, Znii and Crii. We further investigated the significance of the ionization corrections in the determination of the chemical abundances from the low-ionization ions in the sub-DLA Hi column density range. Using the predictions of different ion ratios as a function of the ionization parameter computed using the cloudy software package, we have estimated that with the exception of one case, the ionization corrections to the abundances of nine systems for which we were able to constrain the ionization parameter are lower than 0.2 dex for all of the elements except Alii and Znii down to Hi column densities of logN(Hi)=19.3 cm−2. Finally, we present the first sub-DLA chemical abundance data base, which contains the abundance measurements of 11 different elements (O, C, Si, N, S, Mg, Al, Fe, Ni, Zn and Cr). We took advantage of the lower Hi column densities in sub-DLAs to measure, in particular, the O and C abundances using lines that are normally saturated in DLA

    The Most Metal-Rich Intervening Quasar Absorber Known

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    The metallicity in portions of high-redshift galaxies has been successfully measured thanks to the gas observed in absorption in the spectra of quasars, in the Damped Lyman-alpha systems (DLAs). Surprisingly, the global mean metallicity derived from DLAs is about 1/10th solar at 0<z<4 leading to the so-called ``missing-metals problem''. In this paper, we present high-resolution observations of a sub-DLA system at z_abs=0.716 with super-solar metallicity toward SDSS J1323-0021. This is the highest metallicity intervening quasar absorber currently known, and is only the second super-solar absorber known to date. We provide a detailed study of this unique object from VLT/UVES spectroscopy. We derive [Zn/H]=+0.61, [Fe/H]=-0.51, [Cr/H]=<-0.53, [Mn/H] = -0.37, and [Ti/H] = -0.61. Observations and photoionisation models using the CLOUDY software confirm that the gas in this sub-DLA is predominantly neutral and that the abundance pattern is probably significantly different from a Solar pattern. Fe/Zn and Ti/Zn vary among the main velocity components by factors of \~ 3 and ~ 35, respectively, indicating non-uniform dust depletion. Mn/Fe is super-solar in almost all components, and varies by a factor of ~ 3 among the dominant components. It would be interesting to observe more sub-DLA systems and determine whether they might contribute significantly toward the cosmic budget of metals.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in A&

    The ESO UVES Advanced Data Products Quasar Sample - VI. Sub-Damped Lyman-α\alpha Metallicity Measurements and the Circum-Galactic Medium

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    The Circum-Galactic Medium (CGM) can be probed through the analysis of absorbing systems in the line-of-sight to bright background quasars. We present measurements of the metallicity of a new sample of 15 sub-damped Lyman-α\alpha absorbers (sub-DLAs, defined as absorbers with 19.0 < log N(H I) < 20.3) with redshift 0.584 < zabs\rm z_{abs} < 3.104 from the ESO Ultra-Violet Echelle Spectrograph (UVES) Advanced Data Products Quasar Sample (EUADP). We combine these results with other measurements from the literature to produce a compilation of metallicity measurements for 92 sub-DLAs as well as a sample of 362 DLAs. We apply a multi-element analysis to quantify the amount of dust in these two classes of systems. We find that either the element depletion patterns in these systems differ from the Galactic depletion patterns or they have a different nucleosynthetic history than our own Galaxy. We propose a new method to derive the velocity width of absorption profiles, using the modeled Voigt profile features. The correlation between the velocity width delta_V90 of the absorption profile and the metallicity is found to be tighter for DLAs than for sub-DLAs. We report hints of a bimodal distribution in the [Fe/H] metallicity of low redshift (z < 1.25) sub-DLAs, which is unseen at higher redshifts. This feature can be interpreted as a signature from the metal-poor, accreting gas and the metal-rich, outflowing gas, both being traced by sub-DLAs at low redshifts.Comment: 64 pages, 31 figures, 27 tables. Submitted to MNRA
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