A High-Resolution Survey of Low-Redshift QSO Absorption Lines: Statistics and Physical Conditions of O VI Absorbers
Todd M. Tripp (1), Kenneth R. Sembach (2), David V. Bowen (3), Blair, D. Savage (4), Edward B. Jenkins (3), Nicolas Lehner (5), and Philipp Richter, (6); ((1) Univ. Massachusetts, (2) STScI, (3) Princeton Univ., (4) Univ., Wisconsin, (5) Univ. Notre Dame, (6) Univ. Potsdam)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution UV spectra of 16 low-redshift QSOs to analyze the statistics and physical conditions of O VI absorbers in the intergalactic medium, revealing their distribution, ionization states, and multiphase nature.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed statistical survey of low-z O VI absorbers, characterizing their physical conditions and revealing their complex, multiphase structures.
Findings
Number of O VI absorbers per unit redshift varies with equivalent width.
Many O VI absorbers are aligned with H I, indicating similar gas phases.
A significant fraction of absorbers are multiphase, combining different ionization states.
Abstract
Using high-resolution UV spectra of 16 low-z QSOs, we study the physical conditions and statistics of O VI absorption in the IGM at z < 0.5. We identify 51 intervening (z_{abs} << z_{QSO}) O VI systems comprised of 77 individual components, and we find 14 "proximate" systems (z_{abs} ~ z_{QSO}) containing 34 components. For intervening systems [components] with rest-frame equivalent width W_{r} > 30 mA, the number of O VI absorbers per unit redshift dN/dz = 15.6(+2.9/-2.4) [21.0(+3.2/-2.8)], and this decreases to dN/dz = 0.9(+1.0/-0.5) [0.3(+0.7/-0.3)] for W_{r} > 300 mA. The number per redshift increases steeply as z_{abs} approaches z_{QSO}, and some proximate absorbers have substantially lower H I/O VI ratios. The lower proximate ratios could be partially due to ionization effects but also require higher metallicities. We find that 37% of the intervening O VI absorbers have velocity…
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