Detecting and Characterizing Mg ii Absorption in DESI Survey Validation Quasar Spectra

Napolitano, Lucas and Pandey, Agnesh and Myers, Adam D. and Lan, Ting-Wen and Anand, Abhijeet and Aguilar, Jessica and Ahlen, Steven and Alexander, David M. and Brooks, David and Canning, Rebecca and Circosta, Chiara and De La Macorra, Axel and Doel, Peter and Eftekharzadeh, Sarah and Fawcett, Victoria A. and Font-Ribera, Andreu and Garcia-Bellido, Juan and Gontcho A Gontcho, Satya and Le Guillou, L. and Guy, Julien and Honscheid, Klaus and Juneau, Stephanie and Kisner, T. and Landriau, Martin and Meisner, Aaron M. and Miquel, Ramon and Moustakas, J. and Percival, Will J. and Prochaska, J. Xavier and Schubnell, Michael and Tarlé, Gregory and Weaver, B. A. and Weiner, Benjamin and Zhou, Zhimin and Zou, Hu and Zou, Siwei (2023) Detecting and Characterizing Mg ii Absorption in DESI Survey Validation Quasar Spectra. The Astronomical Journal, 166 (3). p. 99. ISSN 0004-6256

[thumbnail of Napolitano_2023_AJ_166_99.pdf] Text
Napolitano_2023_AJ_166_99.pdf - Published Version

Download (2MB)

Abstract

We present findings of the detection of Magnesium II (Mg ii, λ = 2796, 2803 Å) absorbers from the early data release of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). DESI is projected to obtain spectroscopy of approximately 3 million quasars (QSOs), of which over 99% are anticipated to be at redshifts greater than z > 0.3, such that DESI would be able to observe an associated or intervening Mg ii absorber illuminated by the background QSO. We have developed an autonomous supplementary spectral pipeline that detects these systems through an initial line-fitting process and then confirms the line properties using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampler. Based upon a visual inspection of the resulting systems, we estimate that this sample has a purity greater than 99%. We have also investigated the completeness of our sample in regard to both the signal-to-noise properties of the input spectra and the rest-frame equivalent width (W0) of the absorber systems. From a parent catalog containing 83,207 quasars, we detect a total of 23,921 Mg ii absorption systems following a series of quality cuts. Extrapolating from this occurrence rate of 28.8% implies a catalog at the completion of the five-year DESI survey that will contain over eight hundred thousand Mg ii absorbers. The cataloging of these systems will enable significant further research because they carry information regarding circumgalactic medium environments, the distribution of intervening galaxies, and the growth of metallicity across the redshift range 0.3 ≤ z < 2.5.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Apsci Archives > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@apsciarchives.com
Date Deposited: 15 Nov 2023 07:26
Last Modified: 15 Nov 2023 07:26
URI: http://eprints.go2submission.com/id/eprint/2194

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item