Empirical Calibration of Na I D and Other Absorption Lines as Tracers of High-Redshift Neutral Outflows
Lorenzo Moretti, Sirio Belli, Gwen C. Rudie, Andrew B. Newman, Minjung Park, Amir H. Khoram, Nima Chartab, Darko Donevski

TL;DR
This study empirically calibrates the relationship between sodium and hydrogen absorption lines in high-redshift galaxies, confirming the significance of neutral outflows in galaxy quenching and highlighting discrepancies in other tracers.
Contribution
It provides new empirical calibrations for Na I D and other lines to accurately estimate hydrogen column densities in high-redshift galaxies, improving outflow measurements.
Findings
Na I D calibration is 30% lower than local relation
Neutral outflows can remove significant gas, impacting galaxy evolution
Discrepancies found in Mg II calibration due to dust depletion
Abstract
Recent JWST observations of massive galaxies at z > 2 have detected blueshifted absorption in Na I D and other resonant absorption lines, indicative of strong gas outflows in the neutral phase. However, the measured mass outflow rates are highly uncertain because JWST observations can only probe the column density of trace elements such as sodium, while most of the gas is in the form of hydrogen. The conversion between the column density of sodium and that of hydrogen is based on observations of gas clouds within the Milky Way, and has not been directly tested for massive galaxies at high redshift. In order to test this conversion, we study a unique system consisting of a massive quiescent galaxy (J1439B) at z = 2.4189 located at a projected distance of 38 physical kpc from the bright background quasar QSO J1439. The neutral outflow from the galaxy is observed as a sub-damped…
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