Mg II Absorption at 2<z<7 with Magellan/FIRE, III. Full Statistics of Absorption Towards 100 High-Redshift QSOs
Shi-Fan S. Chen, Robert A. Simcoe, Paul Torrey, Eduardo Ba\~nados,, Kathy Cooksey, Tom Cooper, Gabor Furesz, Michael Matejek, Daniel Miller,, Monica Turner, Bram Venemans, Roberto Decarli, Emanuele P. Farina, Chiara, Mazzucchelli, Fabian Walter

TL;DR
This study provides comprehensive statistics on MgII absorption in high-redshift quasars, revealing its non-evolution over a broad redshift range and suggesting a link to star formation history, with implications for galaxy evolution and CGM properties.
Contribution
It offers the first extensive MgII absorption survey at z>6, compares observations with simulations, and discusses the evolution of MgII systems and their connection to star formation and galaxy feedback.
Findings
MgII incidence rate remains constant from z=0.25 to 7.
Strong MgII systems decline significantly from z~3 to 6.
Simulation comparisons suggest evolving CGM properties and unresolved gas structures.
Abstract
We present final statistics from a survey for intervening MgII absorption towards 100 quasars with emission redshifts between and . Using infrared spectra from Magellan/FIRE, we detect 279 cosmological MgII absorbers, and confirm that the incidence rate of MgII absorption per comoving path length does not evolve measurably between and . This is consistent with our detection of seven new MgII systems at , a redshift range that was not covered in prior searches. Restricting to relatively strong MgII systems (\AA), there is significant evidence for redshift evolution. These systems roughly double in number density between and -, but decline by an order of magnitude from this peak by . This evolution mirrors that of the global star formation rate density, which could reflect a connection between star formation…
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.
