A Kennicutt-Schmidt Law for Intervening Absorption Line Systems
Doron Chelouche, David V. Bowen

TL;DR
This paper proposes that strong MgII absorption systems are linked to star-forming galaxy disks and outflows, establishing a Kennicutt-Schmidt law for these systems to explore galaxy evolution and interstellar medium properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel interpretation of MgII absorbers as star-forming disk outflows, connecting absorption properties with galaxy star formation laws over cosmic time.
Findings
MgII equivalent widths relate to outflow kinematics from star-forming galaxies.
The redshift evolution of absorber density tracks the universe's star formation history.
Strong MgII systems can probe both bright and faint galaxy properties across redshifts.
Abstract
We argue that most strong intervening metal absorption line systems, where the rest equivalent width of the MgII 2796A line is >0.5A, are interstellar material in, and outflowing from, star-forming disks. We show that a version of the Kennicutt-Schmidt law is readily obtained if the MgII equivalent widths are interpreted as kinematic broadening from absorbing gas in outflowing winds originating from star-forming galaxies. Taking a phenomenological approach and using a set of observational constraints available for star-forming galaxies, we are able to account for the density distribution of strong MgII absorbers over cosmic time. The association of intervening material with star-forming disks naturally explains the metallicity and dust content of strong MgII systems as well as their high HI column densities, and does not require the advection of metals from compact star-forming regions…
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