Partial covering of emission regions of Q 0528-250 by intervening H$_2$ clouds
V.V. Klimenko (1,2), S.A. Balashev (1,2), A.V. Ivanchik (1,2), C., Ledoux (4), P. Noterdaeme (3), P. Petitjean (3), R. Srianand (5), D.A., Varshalovich (1,2), ((1) - Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute of RAS, Russia,, (2) - St.-Petersburg State Polytechnical University, Russia

TL;DR
This study reveals partial coverage of the emission region by H$_2$ clouds in a high-redshift quasar, affecting absorption line analysis and physical interpretations of the interstellar medium.
Contribution
It demonstrates the importance of accounting for partial coverage effects in analyzing H$_2$ absorption systems at high redshift.
Findings
Residual flux of about 2.22% detected in saturated H$_2$ lines.
H$_2$ column densities are accurately measured considering partial coverage.
HD molecules are only present in one component, with a lower HD/H$_2$ ratio than previously estimated.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the molecular hydrogen absorption system at z = 2.811 in the spectrum of the blazar Q0528-250. We demonstrate that the molecular cloud does not cover the background source completely. The partial coverage reveals itself as a residual flux in the bottom of saturated H_2 absorption lines. This amounts to about (2.220.54)% of the continuum and does not depend on the wavelength. This value is small and it explains why this effect has not been detected in previous studies of this quasar spectrum. However, it is robustly detected and significantly higher than the zero flux level in the bottom of saturated lines of the Ly-alpha forest, (-0.210.22)%. The presence of the residual flux could be caused by unresolved quasar multicomponents, by light scattered by dust, and/or by jet-cloud interaction. The H absorption system is very well described…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
