The MgII Cross-section of Luminous Red Galaxies
David V. Bowen, Doron Chelouche

TL;DR
This study investigates the presence of MgII absorption lines around luminous red galaxies using SDSS data, finding that such absorption is rare and likely influenced by the galaxies' environments and star formation activity.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis of MgII absorption around LRGs, revealing low covering fractions and environmental effects on cool gas presence.
Findings
MgII absorption is rare around LRGs with 10-15% covering fraction.
Absorption strength does not correlate with impact parameter or luminosity.
Cool gas presence is likely suppressed in high-mass group or cluster environments.
Abstract
We describe a search for MgII(2796,2803) absorption lines in Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) spectra of QSOs whose lines of sight pass within impact parameters of 200 kpc of galaxies with photometric redshifts of z=0.46-0.6 and redshift errors Delta z~0.05. The galaxies selected have the same colors and luminosities as the Luminous Red Galaxy (LRG) population previously selected from the SDSS. A search for Mg II lines within a redshift interval of +/-0.1 of a galaxy's photometric redshift shows that absorption by these galaxies is rare: the covering fraction is ~ 10-15% between 20 and 100 kpc, for Mg II lines with rest equivalent widths of Wr >= 0.6{\AA}, falling to zero at larger separations. There is no evidence that Wr correlates with impact parameter or galaxy luminosity. Our results are consistent with existing scenarios in which cool Mg II-absorbing clouds may be absent near LRGs…
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