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Published December 2016 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Intervening Mg II absorption systems from the SDSS DR12 quasar spectra

Abstract

We present the catalogue of the Mg  II absorption systems detected at a high significance level using an automated search algorithm in the spectra of quasars from the 12th data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. A total of 266,433 background quasars were searched for the presence of absorption systems in their spectra. The continuum modelling for the quasar spectra was performed using a mean filter. A pseudo-continuum derived using a median filter was used to trace the emission lines. The absorption system catalogue contains 39,694 Mg  II systems detected at a 6.0, 3.0σ level respectively for the two lines of the doublet. The catalogue was constrained to an absorption line redshift of 0.35 ≤ z2796 ≤ 2.3. The rest-frame equivalent width of the λ2796 line ranges between 0.2 ≤ Wr ≤ 6.2 Å. Using Gaussian noise-only simulations, we estimate a false positive rate of 7.7 per cent in the catalogue. We measured the number density ∂N^(2796)/∂z of Mg II absorbers and find evidence for steeper evolution of the systems with Wr ≥ 1.2 Å at low redshifts (z2796 ≤ 1.0), consistent with other earlier studies. A suite of null tests over the redshift range 0.5 ≤ z2796 ≤ 1.5 was used to study the presence of systematics and selection effects like the dependence of the number density evolution of the absorption systems on the properties of the background quasar spectra. The null tests do not indicate the presence of any selection effects in the absorption catalogue if the quasars with spectral signal-to-noise level less than 5.0 are removed. The resultant catalogue contains 36,981 absorption systems. The Mg  II absorption catalogue is publicly available and can be downloaded from the link http://srini.ph.unimelb.edu.au/mgii.php.

Additional Information

© 2016 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. Accepted 2016 August 16. Received 2016 August 16; in original form 2015 September 8. SR acknowledges the CONICYT PhD studentship and the support from CONICYT Anillo project (ACT 1122). SR performed a part of this work at the Aspen Centre for Physics, which is supported by National Science Foundation grant PHY-1066293. SR also acknowledges the support from Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects scheme (DP150103208). The authors thank Isabelle Pâris for revising the paper draft, and clarifying several questions about the SDSS DR12Q data that were crucial for this work. SR thanks Prof Sebastian Lopez for useful discussions about the QAL studies and Mg II absorbers. The plotting style for some of the plots in this work was inspired from Seyffert et al. (2013) and ZM13 for the ease of comparison. The authors thank the anonymous referee for all the useful suggestions which were seminal. LEC received partial support from the Centre of Excellence in Astrophysics and Associated Technologies (PFB 06), and from a CONICYT Anillo project (ACT 1122). This research has used the SDSS DR12Q catalogue (Alam et al. 2015a). Funding for SDSS-III has been provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Participating Institutions, the National Science Foundation, and the US Department of Energy Office of Science. The SDSS-III web site is http://www.sdss3.org/. SDSS-III is managed by the Astrophysical Research Consortium for the Participating Institutions of the SDSS-III Collaboration including the University of Arizona, the Brazilian Participation Group, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Carnegie Mellon University, University of Florida, the French Participation Group, the German Participation Group, Harvard University, the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, the Michigan State/Notre Dame/JINA Participation Group, Johns Hopkins University, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, New Mexico State University, New York University, Ohio State University, Pennsylvania State University, University of Portsmouth, Princeton University, the Spanish Participation Group, University of Tokyo, University of Utah, Vanderbilt University, University of Virginia, University of Washington, and Yale University.

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Created:
August 19, 2023
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