Sharp HI edges at high z: the gas distribution from Damped Lyman-alpha to Lyman-limit absorption systems
Abstract
We derive the distribution of neutral and ionized gas in high redshift clouds which are optically thick to hydrogen ionizing radiation, using published data on Lyman-limit and Damped Lyman-alpha absorption systems in the redshift range 1.75 < z < 3.25. We assume that the distribution of the hydrogen total (HI+HII) column density in the absorbers follows a power law K NH-alpha, whereas the observed HI column density distribution deviates from a pure power law as a result of ionization from a background radiation field. Comparison of the models and observations give Maximum Likelihood solutions for the exponent alpha and for X, the value of log(NH/NHI) when the Lyman-limit optical depth is unity: alpha=2.7+1.0-0.7 and X=2.750.35. X is much lower than what would be obtained for a gaseous distribution in equilibrium under its own gravity but the ratio of dark matter to gas density is not well constrained being log(eta0)=1.1 0.8. An extrapolation of our derived power law distribution towards systems of lower column density, the Lyman-alpha forest, favours models with log(eta0) < 1.1 and alpha=2.7-3.3. With alpha appreciably larger than 2, Lyman-limit systems contain more gas than Damped Lyman-alpha systems and Lyman-alpha forest clouds even more. Estimates of the cosmological gas and dark matter density due to absorbers of different column density around z=2.5 are also given.
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