Discovery Of Cold, Pristine Gas Possibly Accreting Onto An Overdensity Of Star-Forming Galaxies At Redshift z ~ 1.6
Mauro Giavalisco (1), Eros Vanzella (2), Sara Salimbeni (1), Todd M., Tripp (1), Mark Dickinson (3), Paolo Cassata (1), Alvio Renzini (4), Yicheng, Guo (1), Henry C. Ferguson (5), Mario Nonino (2), Andrea Cimatti (6), Jaron, Kurk (7), Marco Mignoli (8)

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of large amounts of cold, chemically pristine gas in a galaxy overdensity at redshift 1.6, suggesting possible accretion of gas fueling star formation in high-redshift structures.
Contribution
First evidence of cold, pristine gas accretion onto galaxies within a high-redshift overdensity, identified through ultra-strong Mg II absorption features.
Findings
Detection of cold, chemically young gas via Mg II absorption.
No significant Fe II absorption indicating low metallicity.
Possible large-scale infall motion of gas onto the overdensity.
Abstract
We report the discovery of large amounts of cold (T ~ 10^4 K), chemically young gas in an overdensity of galaxies at redshift z ~ 1.6 in the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey southern field (GOODS-S). The gas is identified thanks to the ultra-strong Mg II absorption features it imprints in the rest-frame UV spectra of galaxies in the background of the overdensity. There is no evidence that the optically-thick gas is part of any massive galaxy (i.e. M_star > 4x10^9 M_sun), but rather is associated with the overdensity; less massive and fainter galaxies (25.5 < z_850 < 27.5 mag) have too large an impact parameter to be causing ultra-strong absorption systems, based on our knowledge of such systems. The lack of corresponding Fe II absorption features, not detected even in co-added spectra, suggests that the gas is chemically more pristine than the ISM and outflows of star-forming…
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