On the link between associated MgII absorbers and star formation in quasar hosts
Yue Shen, Brice M\'enard

TL;DR
This study links associated MgII absorbers in quasars to enhanced star formation and galaxy evolution, suggesting these absorbers are part of the quasar's host environment and indicative of transitional evolutionary stages.
Contribution
It demonstrates that MgII associated absorbers are physically connected to quasar hosts and are associated with increased star formation, supporting their role in galaxy evolution.
Findings
AAL quasars show significant [OII] emission excess.
AALs with v_off<1500 km/s are likely intrinsic and related to host galaxy activity.
AAL quasars exhibit intermediate dust reddening levels.
Abstract
A few percent of quasars show strong associated MgII absorption, with velocities (v_off) lying within a few thousand km/s from the quasar systemic redshift. These associated absorption line systems (AALs) are usually interpreted as absorbers that are either intrinsic to the quasar and its host, or arising from external galaxies clustering around the quasar. Using composite spectra of ~1,800 MgII AAL quasars selected from SDSS DR7 at 0.4<~ z<~2, we show that quasars with AALs with v_off<1500 km/s have a prominent excess in [OII]3727 emission (detected at >7sigma) at rest to the quasar host, compared to unabsorbed quasars. We interpret this [OII] excess as due to enhanced star formation in the quasar host. Our results suggest that a significant fraction of AALs with v_off<1500 km/s are physically associated with the quasar and its host, and are most likely large-scale flows with typical…
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