The Kinematic Evolution of Strong MgII Absorbers
Andrew C. Mshar, Jane C. Charlton, Ryan S. Lynch, Chris Churchill,, Tae-Sun Kim

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of strong MgII absorbers over redshift, revealing that their kinematic properties and absorption extent change, reflecting a transition from complex protogalactic structures to more organized galaxy disks.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of MgII absorber kinematics across a broad redshift range, linking absorption features to galaxy formation and evolution.
Findings
High redshift MgII systems show more extensive velocity ranges.
The fraction of absorption pixels within the velocity range decreases with decreasing redshift.
High redshift absorbers are linked to complex protogalactic structures.
Abstract
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)…
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