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A study of low-metallicity DLAs at high redshift and C II* as a probe of their physical conditions

We present a detailed high spectral resolution (R $\sim$ 40000) study of five high-z damped Lyman $α$ systems (DLAs) and one sub-DLA detected along four QSO sightlines. Four of these DLAs are very metal-poor with [Fe/H] $\le$ $-$2. One of them, at z$_{abs}$ = 4.20287 towards J0953$-$0504, is the most metal-poor DLA at z $>$ 4 known till date. This system shows no enhancement of C over Fe and O, and standard Population II star yields can explain its relative abundance pattern. The DLA at z$_{abs}$ = 2.34006 towards J0035$-$0918 has been claimed to be the most carbon-enhanced metal-poor DLA. However, we show that thermal broadening is dominant in this system and, when this effect is taken into account, the measured carbon enhancement ([C/Fe] = 0.45 $\pm$ 0.19) becomes $\sim$ 10 times less than what was reported previously. The gas temperature in this DLA is estimated to be in the range of 5000 $-$ 8000 K, consistent with a warm neutral medium phase. From photoionization modelling of two of the DLAs showing C II* absorption, we find that the metagalactic background radiation alone is not sufficient to explain the observed C II* cooling rate, and local heating sources, probably produced by in-situ star formation, are needed. Cosmic ray heating is found to contribute $\gtrsim$ 60% to the total heating in these systems. Using a sample of metal-poor DLAs with C II* measurements, we conclude that the cosmic ray ionization rate is equal to or greater than that seen in the Milky Way in $\sim$ 33% of the systems with C II* detections.

preprint2014arXivOpen access

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