Metal-enriched, subkiloparsec gas clumps in the circumgalactic medium of a faint z = 2.5 galaxy

We report the serendipitous detection of a 0.2 L*, Lyα emitting galaxy at redshift 2.5 at an impact parameter of 50 kpc from a bright background QSO sightline. A high-resolution spectrum of the QSO reveals a partial Lyman-limit absorption system (N[subscript Hi] = 10[superscript 16.94±0.10] cm[super...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Crighton, Neil H. M., Hennawi, Joseph F., Simcoe, Robert A., Cooksey, Kathy L., Murphy, Michael T., Fumagalli, Michele, Prochaska, J. Xavier, Shanks, Tom
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: Oxford University Press 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/98292
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3769-9559
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Summary:We report the serendipitous detection of a 0.2 L*, Lyα emitting galaxy at redshift 2.5 at an impact parameter of 50 kpc from a bright background QSO sightline. A high-resolution spectrum of the QSO reveals a partial Lyman-limit absorption system (N[subscript Hi] = 10[superscript 16.94±0.10] cm[superscript −2]) with many associated metal absorption lines at the same redshift as the foreground galaxy. Using photoionization models that carefully treat measurement errors and marginalize over uncertainties in the shape and normalization of the ionizing radiation spectrum, we derive the total hydrogen column density N[subscript H] = 10[superscript 19.4±0.3] cm[superscript −2], and show that all the absorbing clouds are metal enriched, with Z = 0.1–0.6 Z[subscript ⊙]. These metallicities and the system's large velocity width (436 km s[superscript −1]) suggest the gas is produced by an outflowing wind. Using an expanding shell model we estimate a mass outflow rate of ~5 M[subscript ⊙] yr[superscript −1]. Our photoionization model yields extremely small sizes (<100–500 pc) for the absorbing clouds, which we argue is typical of high column density absorbers in the circumgalactic medium (CGM). Given these small sizes and extreme kinematics, it is unclear how the clumps survive in the CGM without being destroyed by hydrodynamic instabilities. The small cloud sizes imply that even state-of-the-art cosmological simulations require more than a 1000-fold improvement in mass resolution to resolve the hydrodynamics relevant for cool gas in the CGM.