Abstract

We study a sample of 17 z > 1.5 absorbers selected based on the presence of strong C I absorption lines in Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) spectra and observed with the European Southern Observatory Very Large Telescope (ESO-VLT) spectrograph X-shooter. We derive metallicities, depletion onto dust, and extinction by dust, and analyse the absorption from Mg II, Mg I, Ca II, and Na I that are redshifted into the near infrared wavelength range. We show that most of these C I absorbers have high metallicity and dust content. We detect nine Ca II absorptions with W(Ca IIλ3934) > 0.23 Å out of 14 systems where we have appropriate wavelength coverage. The observed equivalent widths are similar to what has been measured in other lower redshift surveys of Ca II systems. We detect ten Na I absorptions in the 11 systems where we could observe this absorption. The median equivalent width (W(Na Iλ5891) = 0.68 Å) is larger than what is observed in local clouds with similar H I column densities but also in z < 0.7 Ca II systems detected in the SDSS. The systematic presence of Na I absorption in these C I systems strongly suggests that the gas is neutral and cold, maybe part of the diffuse molecular gas in the interstellar medium of high-redshift galaxies. Most of the systems (12 out of 17) have W(Mg IIλ2796) > 2.5 Å and six of them have log N(H I) < 20.3, with the extreme case of J1341+1852 that has log N(H I) = 18.18. The Mg II absorptions are spread over more than Δυ ~ 400 km s−1 for half of the systems; three absorbers have Δυ > 500 km s−1. The kinematics are strongly perturbed for most of these systems, which indicates that these systems probably do not arise in quiet disks and must be close to regions with intense star-formation activity and/or are part of interacting objects. All this suggests that a large fraction of the cold gas at high redshift arises in disturbed environments.

Highlights

  • Damped Lyman-α systems (DLA) observed in the spectra of bright background sources are produced by neutral gas (Wolfe & Prochaska 2000) located in the halo and/or disk of galaxies

  • The data used in this paper were collected at the European Southern Observatory under Programmes 084.A-0699, 086.A-0074, 086.A-0643, and 087.A-0548, using X-shooter mounted at the UT2 Cassegrain focus of the Very Large Telescope (VLT)

  • Stars form in molecular clouds (e.g. Snow & McCall 2006) that are located in the interstellar medium (ISM) of galaxies whose properties are regulated in turn by radiative and mechanical feedback from stars

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Summary

Introduction

Damped Lyman-α systems (DLA) observed in the spectra of bright background sources are produced by neutral gas (Wolfe & Prochaska 2000) located in the halo and/or disk of galaxies. The associated gas is usually cold with Te ∼ 150 K and dense with nH ∼ 100 cm−3 (Srianand et al 2005; Balashev et al 2011) The latter systems directly trace the diffuse ISM of high-redshift galaxies and are places where it. Is possible to study the relation between the physical properties of the ISM and star-formation activity (Noterdaeme et al 2012b) These are places where one can probe the H i-to-H2 transition in the diffuse interstellar medium of high-redshift galaxies (Noterdaeme et al 2015; Ma et al 2015; Balashev et al 2017).

Sample and observations
Equivalent widths
Metallicities and extinction
Results
Dust dimming
Nature of the systems
Association with galaxies
C i systems and outflows
Conclusion
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