The evolution of Omega(HI) and the epoch of formation of damped Lyman-alpha absorbers

Abstract

We present a study of the evolution of the column density distribution, f(N,z), and total neutral hydrogen mass in high-column density quasar absorbers using candidates from a recent high-redshift survey for damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) and Lyman limit system (LLS) absorbers. The observed number of LLS (N(HI)> 1.6 * 1017 atom/cm2) is used to constrain f(N,z) below the classical DLA Wolfe et al. (1986) definition of 2 * 1020 atom/cm2. The joint LLS-DLA analysis shows unambiguously that f(N,z) deviates significantly from a single power law and that a Gamma-law distribution of the form f(N,z)=(f*/N*)(N/N*)-Beta exp(-N/N*) provides a better description of the observations. These results are used to determine the amount of neutral gas contained in DLAs and in systems with lower column density. Whilst in the redshift range 2 to 3.5, ~90% of the neutral HI mass is in DLAs, we find that at z>3.5 this fraction drops to only 55% and that the remaining 'missing' mass fraction of the neutral gas lies in sub-DLAs with N(HI) 1019 - 2 * 1020 atom/cm2. The characteristic column density, N*, changes from 1.6 * 1021 atom/cm2 at z<3.5 to 2.9 * 1020 atom/cm2 at z>3.5, supporting a picture where at z>3.5, we are directly observing the formation of high column density neutral hydrogen DLA systems from lower column density units. Moreover since current metallicity studies of DLA systems focus on the higher column density systems they may be giving a biased or incomplete view of global galactic chemical evolution at z>3. After correcting the observed mass in HI for the ``missing'' neutral gas the comoving mass density now shows no evidence for a decrease above z=2. (abridged)

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