High Metallicity Mg II Absorbers in the z < 1 Lyman alpha Forest of PKS 0454+039: Giant LSB Galaxies?
Astrophys.J. 499 (1998) 677 We report the discovery of two iron-group enhanced high-metallicity Mg II absorbers in a search through 28 Lyman Alpha forest clouds along the PKS 0454+039 sight line. Based upon our survey and the measured redshift number densities of W_r(MgII) <= 0.3 A absorbers and...
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Main Authors | , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
13.01.1998
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Astrophys.J. 499 (1998) 677 We report the discovery of two iron-group enhanced high-metallicity Mg II
absorbers in a search through 28 Lyman Alpha forest clouds along the PKS
0454+039 sight line. Based upon our survey and the measured redshift number
densities of W_r(MgII) <= 0.3 A absorbers and Lyman Alpha absorbers at z ~ 1,
we suggest that roughly 5% of Lyman Alpha absorbers at z < 1 will exhibit
"weak" Mg II absorption to a 5-sigma W_r(2796) detection limit of 0.02 A. The
two discovered absorbers, at redshifts z = 0.6248 and z = 0.9315, have W_r(Lya)
= 0.33 and 0.15 A, respectively. Based upon photoionization modeling, the H I
column densities are inferred to be in the range 15.8 <= log N(HI) <= 16.8
cm^-2. For the z = 0.6428 absorber, if the abundance pattern is solar, then the
cloud has [Fe/H] > -1; if its gas-phase abundance follows that of depleted
clouds in our Galaxy, then [Fe/H] > 0 is inferred. For the z = 0.9315 absorber,
the metallicity is [Fe/H] > 0, whether the abundance pattern is solar or
suffers depletion. Imaging and spectroscopic studies of the PKS 0454+039 field
reveal no candidate luminous objects at these redshifts. We discuss the
possibility that these Mg II absorbers may arise in the class of "giant" low
surface brightness galaxies, which have [Fe/H] >= -1, and even [Fe/H] >= 0, in
their extended disks. We tentatively suggest that a substantial fraction of
these "weak" Mg II absorbers may select low surface brightness galaxies out to
z ~ 1. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/9801124 |