Highly ionized absorbers at high redshift
Jacqueline Bergeron, St\'ephane Herbert-Fort

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-redshift quasar spectra to characterize metal-rich OVI absorbers, revealing two distinct populations with implications for cosmic metal distribution and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first estimate of the OVI column density distribution and distinguishes between metal-rich and metal-poor absorber populations at high redshift.
Findings
The OVI column density distribution follows a power-law with index ~-1.7.
The cosmic OVI density is about 2.3 times higher than previous estimates.
Metal-rich absorbers are linked to star-forming regions and are not in hydrostatic equilibrium.
Abstract
We investigate the existence of a metal-rich OVI population in 10 high spectral resolution quasar spectra and define observational criteria for this class of absorbers. The low temperatures of nearly half of all OVI absorbers (redshifts 2.0 to 2.6), implied by their line widths, are too low for collisional ionization to be a dominant process. We estimate the oxygen abundance under the assumption of photoionization; a striking result is the bimodal distribution of [O/H] with median values close to 0.01 (0.5) solar for the metal-poor (metal-rich) populations. We present the first estimate of the OVI column density distribution and fit a single power-law index of ~-1.7 and a normalization of f(N)= 2.3e(-13) at log N(OVI) ~ 13.5, both with a ~30% uncertainty. The value of the index is similar to that found for CIV surveys, whereas the normalization factor is about ten times higher. We use…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
