The presence of dust in quasar absorbers, such as damped Lyman alpha (DLA)
systems, may cause the background QSO to appear reddened. We investigate the
extent of this potential reddening by comparing the optical-to-infrared (IR)
colors of QSOs with and without intervening absorbers. Our QSO sample is based
on the Complete Optical and Radio Absorption Line System (CORALS) survey of
Ellison et al (2001). We have obtained near-simultaneous B and K band
magnitudes for subset of the CORALS sample and supplemented our observations
with further measurements published in the literature. To account for
redshift-related color changes, the B-K colors are normalized using the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) QSO composite. The mean normalized B-K color of the
DLA sub-sample is +0.12, whereas the mean for the no-DLA sample is -0.10; both
distributions have RMS scatters ~0.5. Neither a student's T-test nor a KS test
indicate that there is any significant difference between the two color
distributions. Based on simulations which redden the colors of QSOs with
intervening DLAs, we determine a reddening limit which corresponds to E(B-V) <
0.04 (SMC-like extinction) at 99% confidence (3 sigma), assuming that E(B-V) is
the same for all DLAs. Finally, we do not find any general correlation between
absorber properties (such as [Fe/Zn] or neutral hydrogen column density) and
B-K color. One of these two QSOs shows evidence for strong associated
absorption from X-ray observations, an alternative explanation for its very red
color. We conclude that the presence of intervening galaxies causes a minimal
reddening of the background QSO.Comment: Accepted for publication in A