High-Redshift Metals. II. Probing Reionization Galaxies with Low-Ionization Absorption Lines at Redshift Six
George D. Becker (1), Wallace L. W. Sargent (2), Michael Rauch (3),, Alexander P. Calverley (1) ((1) KICC/IoA Cambridge, (2) Caltech, (3) OCIW)

TL;DR
This study surveys low-ionization metal absorption lines at redshifts 5.3 to 6.4, revealing a constant number density comparable to lower redshifts, and suggests these systems probe typical galaxies involved in reionization.
Contribution
It provides new observations of low-ionization systems at z~6, showing their number density and properties, and discusses implications for galaxy evolution and reionization.
Findings
Number density of low-ionization systems remains constant from z~3 to 6.
These systems have weaker lines compared to lower redshifts at similar velocity widths.
They lack strong high-ionization lines, indicating lower metallicities and possibly different gas phases.
Abstract
We present a survey for low-ionization metal absorption line systems towards 17 QSOs at redshifts z_em=5.8-6.4. Nine of our objects were observed at high resolution with either Keck/HIRES or Magellan/MIKE, and the remainder at moderate resolution with Keck/ESI. The survey spans 5.3 < z_abs < 6.4 and has a pathlength interval \Delta X=39.5, or \Delta z=8.0. In total we detect ten systems, five of which are new discoveries. The line-of-sight number density is consistent with the combined number density at z~3 of DLAs and sub-DLAs, which comprise the main population of low-ionization systems at lower redshifts. This apparent lack of evolution may occur because low ionization systems are hosted by lower-mass halos at higher redshifts, or because the mean cross section of low-ionization gas at a given halo mass increases with redshift due to the higher densities and lower ionizing…
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