Metal-rich absorbers at high redshifts: abundance patterns
S. A. Levshakov, I. I. Agafonova, P. Molaro, D. Reimers, and J. L. Hou

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-redshift, metal-rich absorption systems in quasar spectra, revealing their origins from stellar outflows, dust depletion, and isotope variations, with implications for galaxy evolution and star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of metal-rich absorbers at high redshift, highlighting their abundance patterns, sizes, and relation to star-forming galaxies.
Findings
Most systems show abundance patterns linked to stellar outflows.
Silicon deficiency suggests dust grain depletion.
Heavy isotope enrichment affects MgII line profiles.
Abstract
(Abbreviated) From six spectra of high-z QSOs, we select eleven metal-rich, Z>=Z_solar, and optically-thin to the ionizing radiation, N(HI)<10^17 cm^-2, absorption systems ranging between z=1.5 and z=2.9 and revealing lines of different ions in subsequent ionization stages. The majority of the systems (10 from 11) show abundance patterns which relate them to outflows from low and intermediate mass stars. All systems have sub-kpc linear sizes along the line-of-sight with many less than 20 pc. In several systems, silicon is deficient, presumably due to the depletion onto dust grains in the envelopes of dust-forming stars and the subsequent gas-dust separation. At any value of [C/H], nitrogen can be either deficient, [N/C]<0, or enhanced, [N/C]>0, which supposes that the nitrogen enrichment occurs irregularly. In some cases, the lines of MgII 2796, 2803 appear to be shifted, probably as a…
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