Cosmological evolution of atomic gas and implications for 21 cm HI absorption
Robert Braun (CSIRO Astronomy, Space Science)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the evolution of atomic hydrogen in galaxy disks, its impact on 21cm emission and absorption, and predicts how 21cm absorption systems change from high redshift to the present, providing new insights into cosmic HI distribution.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed z=0 distribution function of HI, accounts for opacity effects in HI mass estimates, and predicts the evolution of 21cm absorption systems over cosmic time.
Findings
Atomic clouds of 100pc size significantly affect 21cm emission measurements.
The HI surface area and DLA absorber count decline since z=3, but mass density declines less.
Deep 21cm absorption systems show little evolution, faint absorbers decline by a factor of five.
Abstract
Galaxy disks are shown to contain a significant population of atomic clouds of 100pc linear size which are self-opaque in the 21cm transition. These objects have HI column densities as high as 10^23 and contribute to a global opacity correction factor of 1.34+/-0.05 that applies to the integrated 21cm emission to obtain a total HI mass estimate. Opacity-corrected images of the nearest external galaxies have been used to form a robust z=0 distribution function of HI, f(N_HI,X,z=0), the probability of encountering a specific HI column density per unit comoving distance. This is contrasted with previously published determinations of f(N_HI,X) at z=1 and 3. A systematic decline of moderate column density (18<log(N_HI)<21) HI is observed that corresponds to a decline in surface area of such gas by a factor of five since z=3. The number of equivalent DLA absorbers (log(N_HI)>20.3) has also…
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