The MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field Survey: XII. MgII emission and absorption in star-forming galaxies
Anna Feltre, Roland Bacon, Laurence Tresse, Hayley Finley, David, Carton, J\'er\'emy Blaizot, Nicolas Bouch\'e, Thibault Garel, Hanae Inami,, Leindert A. Boogaard, Jarle Brinchmann, St\'ephane Charlot, Jacopo, Chevallard, Thierry Contini, Leo Michel-Dansac, Guillaume Mahler

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins and properties of MgII emission and absorption in star-forming galaxies at intermediate redshifts, revealing its connection to the interstellar medium's conditions and potential as a diagnostic tool.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis linking MgII emission/absorption profiles to galaxy physical properties and ISM content, using MUSE and HST data.
Findings
MgII emission correlates with lower stellar mass and smaller size.
Galaxies with MgII in emission have lower dust and neutral gas content.
MgII is highly sensitive to the neutral interstellar medium conditions.
Abstract
The physical origin of the near-ultraviolet MgII emission remains an under-explored domain, contrary to more typical emission lines detected in the spectra of star-forming galaxies. We explore the nebular and physical properties for a sample of 381 galaxies between 0.70 < z < 2.34 drawn from the MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Survey. The spectra of these galaxies show a wide variety of profiles of the MgII 2796,2803 resonant doublet, from absorption to emission. We present a study on the main drivers for the detection of MgII emission in galaxy spectra. By exploiting photoionization models we verified that the emission-line ratios observed in galaxies with MgII in emission are consistent with nebular emission from HII regions. From a simultaneous analysis of MUSE spectra and ancillary HST information via spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting, we find that galaxies with MgII in emission…
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