The galaxy counterpart and environment of the dusty Damped Lyman-alpha Absorber at z=2.226 towards Q1218+0832
J. P. U. Fynbo, L. B. Christensen, S. J. Geier, K. E. Heintz, J.-K., Krogager, C. Ledoux, B. Milvang-Jensen, P. M{\o}eller, S. Vejlgaard, J., Viuho, G. \"Ostlin

TL;DR
This study investigates a dusty Damped Lyman-alpha absorber at z=2.226, finding no direct galaxy emission but suggesting the galaxy is either very close or optically dark, and likely part of a galaxy group.
Contribution
First detailed search for the galaxy counterpart of a highly dusty DLA at high redshift using multi-wavelength observations.
Findings
No emission detected from the DLA galaxy in deep imaging.
The DLA galaxy is likely very close or optically dark.
A nearby Lyman-alpha emitter was detected 59 arcsec away.
Abstract
We report on further observations of the field of the quasar Q1218+0832. Geier et al. 2019 presented the discovery of the quasar resulting from a search for quasars reddened and dimmed by dust in foreground damped Lyman-alpha absorbers (DLAs). The DLA is remarkable by having a very large HI column density close to 10^22 cm^-2 . Its dust extinction curve shows the 2175 AA bump known from the Local Group. It also shows absorption from cold gas exemplified by CI and CO molecules. For this paper, we present narrow-band observations of the field of Q1218+0832 and also use an archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image to search for the galaxy counterpart of the DLA. No emission from the DLA galaxy is found in either the narrow-band imaging or in the HST image. In the HST image, we could probe down to an impact parameter of 0.3 arcsec and a 3-sigma detection limit of 26.8 mag per arcsec^2. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReal-time simulation and control systems · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
