The Direct Detection of Cool, Metal-Enriched Gas Accretion onto Galaxies at z ~ 0.5
Kate H. R. Rubin (1), J. Xavier Prochaska (2), David C. Koo (2),, Andrew C. Phillips (2) ((1) MPIA, (2) UCO/Lick Observatory)

TL;DR
This study provides the first clear detection of cool, metal-enriched gas inflow into isolated star-forming galaxies at z ~ 0.5, revealing inflow rates and covering fractions that inform galaxy growth models.
Contribution
It presents the first unambiguous observational evidence of cool gas inflow into distant, isolated star-forming galaxies, using MgII and FeII absorption lines.
Findings
Detected inflow velocities of 80-200 km/s in 5 out of 6 galaxies.
Estimated mass inflow rates of 0.2-3 solar masses per year.
Inflow covering fraction of at least 6%, possibly up to 40%.
Abstract
We report on the discovery of cool gas inflow toward six star-forming galaxies with redshifts z ~ 0.35 - 1. Analysis of MgII and FeII resonance-line absorption in Keck/LRIS spectroscopy of this sample reveals velocity shifts of 80 - 200 km/s and equivalent widths for inflowing gas of >~ 0.6 Ang in five of the six objects. The host galaxies exhibit a wide range in star formation rates (SFR ~ 1 - 40 M_sun/yr) and have stellar masses similar to that of the Milky Way (log M_*/M_sun ~ 9.6 - 10.5). Imaging from the Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys indicates that five of the six galaxies have highly inclined (i > 55 deg), disk-like morphologies. These data represent the first unambiguous detection of inflow into isolated, star-forming galaxies in the distant universe. We suggest that the inflow is due to the infall of enriched material from dwarf satellites and/or a galactic…
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