Search for cold gas in strong MgII absorbers at 0.5<z<1.5: nature and evolution of 21-cm absorbers
N. Gupta, R. Srianand, P. Petitjean, J. Bergeron, P. Noterdaeme, and, S. Muzahid

TL;DR
This study investigates the presence and properties of cold gas in strong MgII absorbers at redshifts 0.5 to 1.5 using 21-cm absorption, revealing a constant detection rate over this period and insights into the gas's patchy nature.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis combining new and literature data on 21-cm absorption in MgII systems at 0.5<z<1.5, revealing the gas's patchy structure and constant detection rate over time.
Findings
21-cm detection rate is higher towards quasars with flat or inverted spectral index.
Approximately 70% of detections are towards quasars with LS<100 pc.
Detection rate remains constant over 0.5<z<1.5, despite expected stellar feedback effects.
Abstract
We report 4 new detections of 21-cm absorption from a systematic search of 21-cm absorption in a sample of 17 strong (Wr(MgII 2796)>1A) intervening MgII absorbers at 0.5<z<1.5. We also present 20-cm milliarcsecond scale maps of 40 quasars having 42 intervening strong MgII absorbers for which we have searched for 21-cm absorption. Combining 21-cm absorption measurements for 50 strong MgII systems from our surveys with the measurements from literature, we obtain a sample of 85 strong MgII absorbers at 0.5<z<1 and 1.1<z<1.5. We present detailed analysis of this sample, taking into account the effect of the varying 21-cm optical depth sensitivity and covering factor associated with the different quasar sight lines. We find that the 21-cm detection rate is higher towards the quasars with flat or inverted spectral index at cm wavelengths. About 70% of 21-cm detections are towards the quasars…
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