Detecting and Characterizing Mg II absorption in DESI Survey Validation Quasar Spectra

Autor: Napolitano, Lucas, Pandey, Agnesh, Myers, Adam D., Lan, Ting-Wen, Anand, Abhijeet, Aguilar, Jessica, Ahlen, Steven, Alexander, David M., Brooks, David, Canning, Rebecca, Circosta, Chiara, De La Macorra, Axel, Doel, Peter, Eftekharzadeh, Sarah, Fawcett, Victoria A., Font-Ribera, Andreu, Garcia-Bellido, Juan, Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A, Guillou, L. Le, Guy, Julien, Honscheid, Klaus, Juneau, Stephanie, Kisner, T., Landriau, Martin, Meisner, Aaron M., Miquel, Ramon, Moustakas, J., Percival, Will J., Prochaska, J. Xavier, Schubnell, Michael, Tarle, Gregory, Weaver, B. A., Weiner, Benjamin, Zhou, Zhimin, Zou, Hu, Zou, Siwei
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
Popis: In this paper we will present findings on the detection of Magnesium II (MgII, lambda = 2796 Å, 2803 Å) absorption systems observed in data from the Early Data Release (EDR) 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 found 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 such systems through an initial line-fitting process and then confirms line properties using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampler. Based upon both a visual inspection and the reanalysis of coadded observations, we estimate this sample of absorption systems to have a completeness of 82.56% and purity of 99.08%. As the spectra in which Mg II systems are detected are the result of coadding multiple observations, we can determine the sensitivity, and therefore completeness, of the sample by searching for known Mg II systems in coadded data with fewer observations (and therefore lower signal-to-noise). 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 28.75% implies a catalog at the completion of the five-year DESI survey that contains over eight hundred thousand Mg II absorbers. The cataloging of these systems will enable significant further research as they carry information regarding circumgalactic medium (CGM) environments, the distribution of intervening galaxies, and the growth of metallicity across the redshift range 0.3 < z < 2.5.
12 pages, 7 figures
Databáze: OpenAIRE