A Search for Oxygen in the Low-Density Lyman-alpha Forest Using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Matthew M. Pieri, Stephan Frank, Smita Mathur, David H. Weinberg,, Donald G. York, and Benjamin D. Oppenheimer

TL;DR
This study detects low-density oxygen in the intergalactic medium using SDSS quasar spectra, employing a novel pixel calibration method, and constrains the cosmic oxygen abundance at redshifts 2.7 to 3.2.
Contribution
Introduces a new Locally Calibrated Pixel search method for detecting oxygen in the Lyman-alpha forest and provides the tightest constraints on cosmic oxygen density at high redshift.
Findings
Significant detection of oxygen absorption at 2.7 < z < 3.2
Estimated average metallicity [O/H] ≈ -2.15
Cosmic oxygen density Omega_Oxy ≈ 1.4×10^(-6)
Abstract
We use 2167 Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) quasar spectra to search for low-density oxygen in the Intergalactic Medium (IGM). Oxygen absorption is detected on a pixel-by-pixel basis by its correlation with Lyman-alpha forest absorption. We have developed a novel Locally Calibrated Pixel (LCP) search method that uses adjacent regions of the spectrum to calibrate interlopers and spectral artifacts, which would otherwise limit the measurement of OVI absorption. Despite the challenges presented by searching for weak OVI within the Lyman-alpha forest in spectra of moderate resolution and signal-to-noise, we find a highly significant detection of absorption by oxygen at 2.7 < z < 3.2 (the null hypothesis has a chi^2=80 for 9 data points). We interpret our results using synthetic spectra generated from a lognormal density field assuming a mixed quasar-galaxy photoionizing background (Haardt…
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