We report the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope detection of HI21-cm absorption from the z ∼ 3.39 damped Lyman a absorber (DLA) towards PKS 0201 + 113, the highest redshift at which 21-cm absorption has been detected in a DLA. The absorption is spread over ∼115 km s-1 and has two components, at z = 3.387 144(17) and z = 3.386 141 (45). The stronger component has a redshift and velocity width in agreement with the tentative detection of Briggs, Brinks & Wolfe, but a significantly lower optical depth. The core size and DLA covering factor are estimated to be ≲ 100 pc and f∼ 0.69, respectively, from a Very Long Baseline Array 328-MHz image. If one makes the conventional assumption that the H I column densities towards the optical and radio cores are the same, this optical depth corresponds to a spin temperature of Ts ∼ [(955 ± 160) × (f/0.69)] K. However, this assumption may not be correct, given that no metal-line absorption is seen at the redshift of the stronger 21-cm component, indicating that this component does not arise along the line of sight to the optical quasi-stellar object (QSO), and that there is structure in the 21-cm absorbing gas on scales smaller than the size of the radio core. We model the 21-cm absorbing gas as having a two-phase structure with cold dense gas randomly distributed within a diffuse envelope of warm gas. For such a model, our radio data indicate that, even if the optical QSO lies along a line of sight with a fortuitously high (∼50 per cent) cold gas fraction, the average cold gas fraction is low, ≲ 17 per cent, when averaged over the spatial extent of the radio core. Finally, the large mismatch between peak 21-cm and optical redshifts and the complexity of both profiles makes it unlikely that the z ∼ 3.39 DLA will be useful in tests of fundamental constant evolution. © 2007 RAS.
CITATION STYLE
Kanekar, N., Chengalur, J. N., & Lane, W. M. (2007). HI 21-cm absorption at z ∼ 3.39 towards PKS 0201+113. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 375(4), 1528–1536. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.11430.x
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