A Cross-Correlation Analysis of Mg II Absorption Line Systems and Luminous Red Galaxies from the SDSS DR5
Britt F. Lundgren, Robert J. Brunner, Donald G. York, Ashley J. Ross,, Jean M. Quashnock, Adam D. Myers, Donald P. Schneider, Yusra AlSayyad, Neta, Bahcall

TL;DR
This study examines the cross-correlation between Mg II absorption systems and luminous red galaxies in SDSS DR5, confirming a weak anti-correlation between equivalent width and halo mass, and exploring biases and evolution of absorber populations.
Contribution
It provides precise measurements of halo masses for Mg II absorbers, investigates bias sources, and analyzes the evolution of absorber populations with redshift.
Findings
Weak anti-correlation between equivalent width and halo mass.
Associated Mg II absorbers are in more massive halos than intervening ones.
Evidence of evolution in the number density of strong absorbers.
Abstract
We analyze the cross-correlation of 2,705 unambiguously intervening Mg II (2796,2803A) quasar absorption line systems with 1,495,604 luminous red galaxies (LRGs) from the Fifth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey within the redshift range 0.36<=z<=0.8. We confirm with high precision a previously reported weak anti-correlation of equivalent width and dark matter halo mass, measuring the average masses to be log M_h(M_[solar]h^-1)=11.29 [+0.36,-0.62] and log M_h(M_[solar]h^-1)=12.70 [+0.53,-1.16] for systems with W[2796A]>=1.4A and 0.8A<=W[2796A]<1.4A, respectively. Additionally, we investigate the significance of a number of potential sources of bias inherent in absorber-LRG cross-correlation measurements, including absorber velocity distributions and the weak lensing of background quasars, which we determine is capable of producing a 20-30% bias in angular cross-correlation…
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