We consider the questions of whether the damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) and sub-DLA
absorbers in quasar spectra differ intrinsically in metallicity, and whether
they could arise in galaxies of different masses. Using the recent measurements
of the robust metallicity indicators Zn and S in DLAs and sub-DLAs, we confirm
that sub-DLAs have higher mean metallicities than DLAs, especially at z≲2. We find that the intercept of the metallicity-redshift relation
derived from Zn and S is higher than that derived from Fe by 0.5-0.6 dex. We
also show that, while there is a correlation between the metallicity and the
rest equivalent width of Mg II λ2796 or Fe II λ2599 for DLAs,
no correlation is seen for sub-DLAs. Given this, and the similar Mg II or Fe II
selection criteria employed in the discovery of both types of systems at lower
redshifts, the difference between metallicities of DLAs and sub-DLAs appears to
be real and not an artefact of selection. This conclusion is supported by our
simulations of Mg II λ2796 and Fe II λ2599 lines for a wide
range of physical conditions. On examining the velocity spreads of the
absorbers, we find that sub-DLAs show somewhat higher mean and median velocity
spreads (Δv), and an excess of systems with Δv>150 km
s−1, than DLAs. Compared to DLAs, the [Mn/Fe] vs. [Zn/H] trend for
sub-DLAs appears to be steeper and closer to the trend for Galactic bulge and
thick disk stars, possibly suggesting different stellar populations. The
absorber data appear to be consistent with galaxy down-sizing. The data are
also consistent with the relative number densities of low-mass and high-mass
galaxies. It is thus plausible that sub-DLAs arise in more massive galaxies on
average than DLAs.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in New
Astronom