2,454 research outputs found
Mining Circumgalactic Baryons in the Low-Redshift Universe
(Abridged) This paper presents an absorption-line study of the multiphase
circumgalactic medium (CGM) based on observations of Lya, CII, CIV, SiII,
SiIII, and SiIV absorption transitions in the vicinities of 195 galaxies at
redshift z<0.176. The galaxy sample is established based on a cross-comparison
between public galaxy and QSO survey data and is characterized by a median
redshift of =0.041, a median projected distance of =362 kpc to the
sightline of the background QSO, and a median stellar mass of log(M_star/M_sun)
= 9.7 \pm 1.1. Comparing the absorber features identified in the QSO apectra
with known galaxy properties has led to strong constraints for the CGM
absorption properties at z<~0.176. First, abundant hydrogen gas is observed out
to d~500 kpc, well beyond the dark matter halo radius Rh of individual
galaxies, with a mean covering fraction of ~60%. In contrast, no heavy elements
are detected at d>~0.7 Rh from either low-mass dwarfs or high-mass galaxies.
The lack of detected heavy elements in low- and high-ionization states suggests
that either there exists a chemical enrichment edge at d~0.7 Rh or gaseous
clumps giving rise to the observed absorption lines cannot survive at these
large distances. Considering all galaxies at d>Rh leads to a strict upper limit
for the covering fraction of heavy elements of ~3% (at a 95% confidence level)
over d=(1-9) Rh. At d<Rh, differential covering fraction between low- and
high-ionization gas is observed, suggesting that the CGM becomes progressively
more ionized from d<0.3 Rh to larger distances. Comparing CGM absorption
observations at low and high redshifts shows that at a fixed-fraction of Rh the
CGM exhibits stronger mean absorption at z=2.2 than at z~0. We discuss possible
pseudo-evolution of the CGM as a result of misrepresentation of halo radius.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
On the Halo Occupation of Dark Baryons
We introduce a new technique that adopts the halo occupation framework for
understanding the origin of QSO absorption-line systems. Our initial study
focuses specifically on MgII absorbers. We construct a model of the gaseous
content in which the absorption equivalent width W_r is determined by the the
amount of cold gas, in the form of discrete clouds, along a sightline through a
halo. The two quantities that we specify per halo in the model are (1) the mean
absorption strength per unit surface mass density A_W(M), and (2) the mean
covering factor kappa_g(M) of the gaseous clouds. These parameters determine
the conditional probability distribution of W_r as a function of halo mass,
P(W_r|M). Two empirical measurements are applied to constrain the model: (i)
the absorber frequency distribution function and (ii) the W_r-dependent
clustering amplitude. We find that the data demand a rapid transition in the
gas content of halos at ~10^11.5 Msol/h, below which halos contain
predominantly cold gas and beyond which gas becomes predominantly hot. In order
to reproduce the observed overall strong clustering of the absorbers and the
anti-correlation between W_r and halo mass M, roughly 5% of gas in halos up to
10^14 Msol/h is required to be cold. The gas covering factor is near unity over
a wide range of halo mass, supporting that Mg II systems probe an unbiased
sample of typical galaxies. We discuss the implications of our study in the
contexts of mass assembly of distant galaxies and the origin of QSO absorption
line systems.Comment: 15 emulateapj pages, 7 figures, replaced with revised version
incorporating referee's comment
A STIS Survey for OVI Absorption Systems at 0.12 < z < 0.5 I.: The Statistical Properties of Ionized Gas
We have conducted a systematic survey for intervening OVI absorbers in
available echelle spectra of 16 QSOs at z_QSO = 0.17-0.57. These spectra were
obtained using HST/STIS with the E140M grating. Our search uncovered a total of
27 foreground OVI absorbers with rest-frame absorption equivalent width
W_r(1031) > 25mA. Ten of these QSOs exhibit strong OVI absorbers in their
vicinity. Our OVI survey does not require the known presence of Lya, and the
echelle resolution allows us to identify the OVI absorption doublet based on
their common line centroid and known flux ratio. We estimate the total redshift
survey path, \Delta z, using a series of Monte-Carlo simulations, and find that
\Delta z=1.66, 2.18, and 2.42 for absorbers of strength W_r = 30, 50 and 80mA,
respectively, leading to a number density of dN(W > 50mA)/dz = 6.7 +/- 1.7 and
dN(W > 30mA)/dz = 10.4 +/- 2.2. In contrast, we also measure dN/dz = 27 +/- 9
for OVI absorbers of W_r > 50mA at |\Delta v|< 5000 kms from the background
QSOs. Using the random sample of OVI absorbers with well characterized survey
completeness, we estimate a mean cosmological mass density of the OVI gas
\Omega(OVI)h = 1.7 +/- 0.3 x 10^-7. In addition, we show that <5% of OVI
absorbers originate in underdense regions that do not show a significant trace
of HI. Furthermore, we show that the neutral gas column N(HI) associated with
these OVI absorbers spans nearly five orders of magnitude, and show moderate
correlation with N(OVI). Finally, while the number density of OVI absorbers
varies substantially from one sightline to another, it also appears to be
inversely correlated with the number density of HI absorbers along individual
lines of sight.Comment: 12 pages. ApJ accepte
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