Enriched haloes at redshift $z=2$ with no star-formation: Implications for accretion and wind scenarios
N. Bouche (1,2), M. T. Murphy (3), C. Peroux (4), T. Contini (2), C., L. Martin (1), N. M. Forster Schreiber (5), R. Genzel (5), D. Lutz (5), S., Gillessen (5), L. Tacconi (5), R. Davies (5), F. Eisenhauer (5) ((1) UC Santa, Barbara, (2) IRAP Toulouse, (3), Swinburne University

TL;DR
This study investigates the star-formation activity of galaxies associated with MgII absorbers at redshift 2, revealing low detection rates and suggesting a transition in accretion efficiency affecting halo gas properties.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the star-formation properties of MgII-selected galaxies at z=2 and proposes a transition in accretion efficiency around halo mass 10^{11} Msun.
Findings
Low detection rate of H-alpha emission at z=2 despite sensitivity.
Detected hosts have high SFR > 9 M/yr, indicating evolution with redshift.
Supports a transition in accretion efficiency at halo mass ~10^{11} Msun.
Abstract
[Abridged] In order to understand which process (e.g. galactic winds, cold accretion) is responsible for the cool (T~10^4 K) halo gas around galaxies, we embarked on a program to study the star-formation properties of galaxies selected by their MgII absorption signature in quasar spectra. Specifically, we searched for the H-alpha line emission from galaxies near very strong z=2 MgII absorbers (with rest-frame equivalent width EW>2 \AA) because these could be the sign-posts of outflows or inflows. Surprisingly, we detect H-alpha from only 4 hosts out of 20 sight-lines (and 2 out of the 19 HI-selected sight-lines), despite reaching a star-formation rate (SFR) sensitivity limit of 2.9 M/yr (5-sigma) for a Chabrier initial mass function. This low success rate is in contrast with our z=1 survey where we detected 66%\ (14/21) of the MgII hosts. Taking into account the difference in…
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