Abstract
We present results from a search for galaxies that give rise to damped Lyman
alpha (DLA), subDLA, and Lyman limit system (LLS) absorption at redshifts 0.1
~< z ~< 1 in the spectra of background quasars. The sample was formed from a
larger sample of strong MgII absorbers (W_0^(2796) >= 0.3 A) whose HI column
densities were determined by measuring the Ly-alpha line in HST UV spectra.
Photometric redshifts, galaxy colors, and proximity to the quasar sightline, in
decreasing order of importance, were used to identify galaxies responsible for
the absorption. Our sample includes 80 absorption systems for which the
absorbing galaxies have been identified, of which 54 are presented here for the
first time. The main results of this study are: (i) the surface density of
galaxies falls off exponentially with increasing impact parameter, b, from the
quasar sightline relative to a constant background of galaxies, with an
e-folding length of ~46 kpc. Galaxies with b >~ 100 kpc calculated at the
absorption redshift are statistically consistent with being unrelated to the
absorption system. (ii) log N(HI) is inversely correlated with b at the 3.0
sigma level of significance. DLA galaxies are found systematically closer to
the quasar sightline, by a factor of two, than are galaxies which give rise to
subDLAs or LLSs. The median impact parameter is 17.4 kpc for the DLA galaxy
sample, 35.3 kpc for the subDLA sample, and 36.4 kpc for the LLS sample. (iii)
Absorber galaxy luminosity relative to L*, L/L*, is not significantly
correlated with W_0^(2796), log N(HI), or b. (iv) DLA, subDLA, and LLS galaxies
comprise a mix of spectral types, but are inferred to be predominantly late
type galaxies based on their spectral energy distributions. The implications of
these results are discussed. (Abridged)
Description
[1103.4047] A Groundbased Imaging Study of Galaxies Causing DLA, subDLA, and LLS Absorption in Quasar Spectra
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