Hot Halos around High Redshift Protogalaxies: Observations of O VI and N V Absorption in Damped Lyman Alpha systems
Andrew J. Fox (IAP), Patrick Petitjean (IAP), Cedric Ledoux (ESO), &, Raghunathan Srianand (IUCAA)

TL;DR
This study investigates highly ionized gas in high-redshift damped Lyman-alpha systems, revealing two plasma phases, their properties, and potential contributions to the cosmic metal budget, based on observations of O VI and other ions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of O VI absorption in DLAs at high redshift, identifying two distinct ionized gas phases and their relation to galaxy evolution.
Findings
Detection of O VI in 12 out of 35 DLAs, with incidence between 34% and 100%.
Evidence for two plasma phases: hot collisionally ionized and warm photoionized.
Hot and warm phases contain significant fractions of the baryonic mass and may influence the high-redshift metal budget.
Abstract
(ABRIDGED) We present a study of the highly ionized gas (plasma) associated with damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems at z=2.1-3.1. We search for O VI absorption and corresponding Si IV, C IV, and N V in a Very Large Telescope/Ultraviolet-Visible Echelle Spectrograph (VLT/UVES) sample of 35 DLA systems with data covering O VI at S/N>10. We report twelve DLAs (nine intervening and three at <5000 km/s from the QSO redshift) with detections of O VI absorption. There are no clear O VI non-detections, so the incidence of O VI in DLAs is between 34% (12/35) and 100%. Analysis of the line widths together with photoionization modelling suggests that two phases of DLA plasma exist: a hot, collisionally ionized phase (seen in broad O VI components), and a warm, photoionized phase (seen just in narrow C IV and Si IV components). We find tentative evidence (98% confidence) for correlations between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
