Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conference participants
- Conference photograph / poster
- 1 Physics of H2 and HD
- 2 Formation - Destruction
- 3 Observations and Models
- 4 Extragalactic and Cosmology
- The Role of H2 Molecules in Cosmological Structure Formation
- The Role of H2 Molecules in Primordial Star Formation
- Evolution of Primordial H2 for Different Cosmological Models
- Dynamics of H2 Cool Fronts in the Primordial Gas
- Is Reionization Regulated by H2 in the Early Universe?
- H2 in Galaxies
- Transformation of Galaxies within the Hubble Sequence
- Extragalactic H2 and its Variable Relation to CO
- The Galactic Dark Matter Halo: Is it H2?
- Observations of H2 in Quasar Absorbers
- H2 Emission as a Diagnostic of Physical Processes in Starforming Galaxies
- 5 Outlook
- Author index
Observations of H2 in Quasar Absorbers
from 4 - Extragalactic and Cosmology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conference participants
- Conference photograph / poster
- 1 Physics of H2 and HD
- 2 Formation - Destruction
- 3 Observations and Models
- 4 Extragalactic and Cosmology
- The Role of H2 Molecules in Cosmological Structure Formation
- The Role of H2 Molecules in Primordial Star Formation
- Evolution of Primordial H2 for Different Cosmological Models
- Dynamics of H2 Cool Fronts in the Primordial Gas
- Is Reionization Regulated by H2 in the Early Universe?
- H2 in Galaxies
- Transformation of Galaxies within the Hubble Sequence
- Extragalactic H2 and its Variable Relation to CO
- The Galactic Dark Matter Halo: Is it H2?
- Observations of H2 in Quasar Absorbers
- H2 Emission as a Diagnostic of Physical Processes in Starforming Galaxies
- 5 Outlook
- Author index
Summary
The ultraviolet Lyman and Werner absorption lines of H2 have been searched for in a number of high redshift quasar spectra, and detected unambiguously in at least 3 systems at redshifts z∼2. The lack of detectable H2 in most absorbers results from the strong selection in quasar studies against lines-of-sight with significant dust extinction. At high redshift, the ultraviolet radiation field is inferred to be higher than that observed in the local solar neighborhood, suggesting that vigorous star-formation is underway in these galaxies.
Introduction
Recent observations of the high redshift Universe, interpreted in the context of a new generation of computer simulated model Universes, are providing a clear picture of how large galaxies like the Milky Way formed. A number of different observations suggest that large galaxies were assembled from what appear at z = 2 – 3 to be several star-forming proto-galactic fragments (PGF's), widely distributed in space (Windhorst et al. 1994, Pascarelle et al. 1996ab, 1998; Steidel et al. 1996ab, Bechtold et al. 1998). Computer simulations suggest that initially small clumps of material collapsed at the intersection of sheets and filaments in the intergalactic medium, and began forming stars, and that eventually these clumps merged to form large galaxies (Haehnelt, Steinmetz & Rauch 1998, Steinmetz 1998 and references therein). Searches for the galaxies associated with damped Ly-α quasar absorbers show that at z ∼ 2 they are the same population of objects seen in the Hubble Deep Field faint galaxies and the Lyman dropout galaxies (Steidel et al. 1996ab; Bechtold et al. 1998).
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- Information
- Molecular Hydrogen in Space , pp. 301 - 306Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000