Аннотация
Lyman- and Werner-band absorption of molecular hydrogen (H2) is detected in
~50% of low redshift (z<1) DLAs/sub-DLAs with N(H2)>10^14.4 cm^-2. However the
true origin(s) of the H2 bearing gas remain elusive. Here we report a new
detection of an H2 absorber at z = 0.4298 in the HST/COS spectra of quasar
PKS~2128--123. The total N(HI) of 10^19.50\pm0.15 cm^-2 classifies the
absorber as a sub-DLA. H2 absorption is detected up to the J=3 rotational level
with a total log N(H2)=16.36\pm0.08 corresponding to a molecular fraction of
log f(H2)=-2.84\pm0.17. The excitation temperature of T_ex = 206\pm6K indicates
the presence of cold gas. Using detailed ionization modelling we obtain a
near-solar metallicity (i.e., O/H= -0.26\pm0.19) and a dust-to-gas ratio of
log ~ -0.45 for the H2 absorbing gas. The host-galaxy of the sub-DLA is
detected at an impact parameter of ~ 48 kpc with an inclination angle of
i~48 degree and an azimuthal angle of \Phi ~ 15 degree with respect to the QSO
sightline. We show that co-rotating gas in an extended disk cannot explain the
observed kinematics of MgII absorption. Moreover, the inferred high metallicity
is not consistent with the scenario of gas accretion. An outflow from the
central region of the host-galaxy, on the other hand, would require a large
opening angle (i.e., 2$þeta>$150\degree), much larger than the observed
outflow opening angles in Seyfert galaxies, in order to intercept the QSO
sightline. We thus favor a scenario in which the H2 bearing gas is stemming
from a dwarf-satellite galaxy, presumably via tidal and/or ram-pressure
stripping. Detection of a dwarf galaxy candidate in the HST/WFPC2 image at an
impact parameter of ~12 kpc reinforces such an idea.
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