The neutral gas extent of galaxies as derived from weak intervening CaII absorbers
P. Richter, F. Krause, C. Fechner, J.C. Charlton, M.T. Murphy

TL;DR
This study analyzes weak CaII absorbers at low redshift using high-resolution spectra, revealing their prevalence, association with neutral gas in galaxy halos, and estimating their typical extent around galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic, bias-corrected measurement of weak CaII absorber density and links these absorbers to neutral gas structures in galaxy halos and circumgalactic environments.
Findings
Weak CaII absorbers are 2.6 times more common than low-redshift DLAs.
CaII absorption arises in optically thick neutral gas in various systems.
Characteristic extent of neutral gas clouds around galaxies is approximately 55 kpc.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present a systematic study of weak intervening CaII absorbers at low redshift (z<0.5), based on the analysis of archival high resolution (R>45,000) optical spectra of 304 quasars and active galactic nuclei observed with VLT/UVES. Along a total redshift path of Dz~100 we detected 23 intervening CaII absorbers in both the CaII H & K lines, with rest frame equivalent widths W_r,3934=15-799 mA and column densities log N(CaII)=11.25-13.04. We obtain a bias corrected number density of weak intervening CaII absorbers of dN/dz=0.117+-0.044 at z=0.35 for absorbers with log N(CaII)>11.65. This is ~2.6 times the value obtained for damped Lyman alpha absorbers (DLAs) at low redshift. From ionization modeling we conclude that intervening CaII absorption with log N(CaII)>11.5 arises in optically thick neutral gas in DLAs, sub-DLAs and Lyman limit systems (LLS) at HI column densities of…
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