Evolution of the Population of Very Strong MgII Absorbers
Paola Rodr\'iguez Hidalgo, Kaylan Wessels, Jane Charlton, Anand, Narayanan, Andrew Mshar, Antonino Cucchiara, and Therese Jones

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of strong MgII absorbers over cosmic time, revealing changes in their kinematic profiles and FeII/MgII ratios that suggest evolving star formation and galactic wind activity.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the kinematic and chemical evolution of MgII absorbers from redshift 2.5 to 0.2 using high-resolution spectra from VLT/UVES.
Findings
No evolution in FeII/MgII ratio for moderate absorbers.
High-z very strong MgII absorbers show larger velocity spreads.
Low-z very strong MgII absorbers are saturated with smaller velocity spreads.
Abstract
We present a study of the evolution of several classes of MgII absorbers, and their corresponding FeII absorption, over a large fraction of cosmic history: 2.3 to 8.7 Gyrs from the Big Bang. Our sample consists of 87 strong (Wr(MgII)>0.3 A) MgII absorbers, with redshifts 0.2<z<2.5, measured in 81 quasar spectra obtained from the Very Large Telescope(VLT)/Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph(UVES) archives of high-resolution spectra (R \sim 45,000). No evolutionary trend in Wr(FeII)/Wr(MgII) is found for moderately strong MgII absorbers (0.3<Wr(MgII)<1.0 A). However, at lower z we find an absence of very strong MgII absorbers (those with Wr(MgII)>1 A) with small ratios of equivalent widths of FeII to MgII. At high z, very strong MgII absorbers with both small and large Wr(FeII)/Wr(MgII) values are present. We compare our findings to a sample of 100 weak MgII absorbers…
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