The Cosmic Ultraviolet Baryon Survey (CUBS) - III. Physical properties and elemental abundances of Lyman-limit systems at z < 1
Faucher-Giguère, Claude-André; Johnson, Sean D.; Petitjean, Patrick; Rafelski, Marc; Zahedy, Fakhri S.; Chen, Hsiao-Wen; Rauch, Michael; Greene, Jenny E.; Mulchaey, John S.; Simcoe, Robert A.; Cantalupo, Sebastiano; Rudie, Gwen C.; Schaye, Joop; Penton, Steven V.; Putman, Mary E.; Lopez, Sebastian; Chen, Mandy C.; Boettcher, Erin; Cooksey, Kathy L.; Walth, Gregory L.; Cooper, Thomas M.
United States, Switzerland, Italy, Chile, France, Netherlands
Abstract
We present a systematic investigation of physical conditions and elemental abundances in four optically thick Lyman-limit systems (LLSs) at z = 0.36-0.6 discovered within the Cosmic Ultraviolet Baryon Survey (CUBS). Because intervening LLSs at z < 1 suppress far-UV (ultraviolet) light from background QSOs, an unbiased search of these absorbers requires a near-UV-selected QSO sample, as achieved by CUBS. CUBS LLSs exhibit multicomponent kinematic structure and a complex mix of multiphase gas, with associated metal transitions from multiple ionization states such as C II, C III, N III, Mg II, Si II, Si III, O II, O III, O VI, and Fe II absorption that span several hundred km s-1 in line-of-sight velocity. Specifically, higher column density components (log N(H I)/cm-2≳ 16) in all four absorbers comprise dynamically cool gas with $\langle T \rangle =(2\pm 1) \times 10^4\,$K and modest non-thermal broadening of $\langle b_\mathrm{nt} \rangle =5\pm 3\,$km s-1. The high quality of the QSO absorption spectra allows us to infer the physical conditions of the gas, using a detailed ionization modelling that takes into account the resolved component structures of H I and metal transitions. The range of inferred gas densities indicates that these absorbers consist of spatially compact clouds with a median line-of-sight thickness of $160^{+140}_{-50}$ pc. While obtaining robust metallicity constraints for the low density, highly ionized phase remains challenging due to the uncertain $N\mathrm{(H\, {\small I})}$, we demonstrate that the cool-phase gas in LLSs has a median metallicity of $\mathrm{[\alpha /H]_{1/2}}=-0.7^{+0.1}_{-0.2}$, with a 16-84 percentile range of [α/H] = (-1.3, -0.1). Furthermore, the wide range of inferred elemental abundance ratios ([C/α], [N/α], and [Fe/α]) indicate a diversity of chemical enrichment histories. Combining the absorption data with deep galaxy survey data characterizing the galaxy environment of these absorbers, we discuss the physical connection between star-forming regions in galaxies and diffuse gas associated with optically thick absorption systems in the z < 1 circumgalactic medium.