Galaxies with Background QSOs, I: A Search for Strong Galactic H-alpha Lines
Donald G. York, Lorrie A. Straka, Michael Bishof, Seth Kuttruff, David, Bowen, Varsha P. Kulkarni, Mark Subbarao, Gordon Richards, Daniel Vanden, Berk, Patrick B. Hall, Timothy Heckman, Pushpa Khare, Jean Quashnock, Lara, Ghering, Sean Johnson

TL;DR
This study searches for strong H-alpha emission lines in foreground galaxies seen in quasar spectra from SDSS DR5, identifying 23 cases of low-redshift galaxies with impact parameters less than 10 kpc, and analyzes their properties and reddening effects.
Contribution
It presents the first systematic search for emission lines in foreground galaxies in SDSS quasar spectra, expanding understanding of galaxy-quasar line-of-sight interactions.
Findings
23 galaxies with strong H-alpha emission detected
Galaxies are predominantly blue and disk-dominated
Correlation found between Ca II absorption and reddening
Abstract
A search for emission lines in foreground galaxies in quasar spectra (z(gal) < z(QSO)) of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data release 5 (DR5) reveals 23 examples of quasars shining through low redshift, foreground galaxies at small impact parameters (< 10 kpc). About 74,000 quasar spectra were examined by searching for narrow H{\alpha} emission lines at z < 0.38, at a flux level greater than 5 \times 10^-17 ergs cm^-2 s^-1, then confirming that other expected emission lines of the H II regions in the galaxy are detected. The galaxies were deblended from the quasar images to get colors and morphologies. For cases that allow the galaxy and the quasar to be deblended, the galaxies are blue (0.95 <(u-r)< 1.95). Extinction and reddening through the galaxies is determined from the (g-i) color excesses of the quasars. These reddening values are compared with the flux ratio of H{\alpha} to…
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