Semi-analytic models of galaxy formation postulate the existence of
virialized gaseous halos around galaxies at high redshifts. A small fraction of
the light emitted by any high-redshift quasar is therefore expected to scatter
off the free electrons in the halo of its host galaxy. The broadening of the
scattered emission lines of the quasar can be used to measure the temperature
of these electrons. For gas in virial equilibrium, the velocity width of the
scattered line profile is larger by a factor of (m_p/m_e)^{1/2}=43 than the
velocity dispersion of the host galaxy and reaches >10,000 km/s for the massive
galaxies and groups in which bright quasars reside. In these systems, the
scattered width exceeds the intrinsic width of the quasar lines and hence can
be used to measure the virial temperature of the quasar host. The high degree
of polarization of the scattered radiation can help filter out the extended
scattered light from the central emission by the quasar and its host galaxy.
The signal-to-noise ratio of the spectral broadening can be enhanced by
matching the full spectrum of the scattered radiation to a template of the
unscattered quasar spectrum. Although the central fuzz around low-redshift
quasars is dominated by starlight, the fuzz around high-redshift quasars might
be dominated by scattering before galaxies have converted most of their gas
reservoirs into stars.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figures, submitted to ApJ Letter