What Determines the Incidence and Extent of MgII Absorbing Gas Around Galaxies?
Hsiao-Wen Chen, Vivienne Wild, Jeremy L. Tinker, Jean-Rene Gauthier,, Jennifer E. Helsby, Stephen A. Shectman, and Ian B. Thompson

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy properties like mass and star formation rate influence the extent of MgII absorbing gas halos, revealing that more massive galaxies have larger halos and that star formation activity also plays a role.
Contribution
It provides new empirical relations linking MgII halo extent to galaxy stellar mass and star formation rate, offering insights into halo gas origins and galaxy evolution.
Findings
MgII halo extent scales with galaxy mass and star formation rate.
More massive galaxies have more extended MgII halos.
The results support infalling clouds as sources of MgII absorbers.
Abstract
We study the connections between on-going star formation, galaxy mass, and extended halo gas, in order to distinguish between starburst-driven outflows and infalling clouds that produce the majority of observed MgII absorbers at large galactic radii (>~ 10 h^{-1} kpc) and to gain insights into halo gas contents around galaxies. We present new measurements of total stellar mass (M_star), H-alpha emission line strength (EW(H-alpha)), and specific star formation rate (sSFR) for the 94 galaxies published in H.-W. Chen et al. (2010). We find that the extent of MgII absorbing gas, R_MgII, scales with M_star and sSFR, following R_MgII \propto M_star^{0.28}\times sSFR^{0.11}. The strong dependence of R_MgII on M_star is most naturally explained, if more massive galaxies possess more extended halos of cool gas and the observed MgII absorbers arise in infalling clouds which will subsequently fuel…
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