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154 - Jiang-Tao Li , n 2014
X-ray observations of circumgalactic coronae provide a valuable means by which to test galaxy formation theories. Two primary mechanisms are thought to be responsible for the establishment of such coronae: accretion of intergalactic gas (IGM) and/or galactic feedback. In this paper, we first compare our Chandra sample of galactic coronae of 53 nearby highly-inclined disc galaxies to an analytical model considering only the accretion of IGM. We confirm the existing conclusion that this pure accretion model substantially over-predicts the coronal emission. We then select 30 field galaxies from our original sample, and correct their coronal luminosities to uniformly compare them to deep X-ray measurements of several massive disc galaxies from the literature, as well as to a comparable sample of simulated galaxies drawn from the Galaxies-Intergalactic Medium Interaction Calculation (GIMIC). These simulations explicitly model both accretion and SNe feedback and yield galaxies exhibit X-ray properties in broad agreement with our observational sample. However, notable and potentially instructive discrepancies exist between the slope and scatter of the Lx-M200 and Lx-SFR relations, highlighting some known shortcomings of GIMIC, e.g., the absence of AGN feedback, and possibly the adoption of constant stellar feedback parameters. The simulated galaxies exhibit a tight Lx-M200 correlation with little scatter. Having inferred M200 for our observational sample via the Tully-Fisher relation, we find a weaker and more scattered correlation. In the simulated and observed samples alike, massive non-starburst galaxies above a typical transition mass of M*~2e11Msun or M200~1e13Msun tend to have higher Lx/M* and Lx/M200 than low-mass counterparts, indicating that the accretion of IGM plays an increasingly important role in establishing the observable hot circumgalactic medium with increasing galaxy mass.
X-ray-emitting coronae of nearby galaxies are expected to be produced either by accretion from the intergalactic medium and/or by various galactic feedback. We herein present a systematical analysis of the Chandra observations of 53 nearby edge-on di sk galaxies over a range of 3 orders of magnitude in SFR. Various coronal properties, such as the luminosity, vertical/horizontal extent, and other inferred parameters, are characterized for all the sample galaxies. For galaxies with high enough counting statistics, we also examine the thermal and chemical states of the coronal gas. Here we concentrate on the coronal luminosity (Lx), estimated in 0.5-2keV and within 5 times the diffuse X-ray vertical scale height. We find Lx strongly correlates with the SFR for the whole sample. But the inclusion of Ia SNe in the total energy input (E_SN) gives an even tighter correlation, which may be characterized with a linear relation, Lx=0.5%E_SN, and with a dispersion of 0.45dex. Moreover, the coronal radiation efficiency (eta=Lx/E_SN) shows little correlation with either the stellar mass or the gravitational mass (M_TF, inferred from the rotation velocity), but is significantly correlated with their ratio (M_TF/M_*), which may be expressed as a linear scaling relation eta=0.35%M_TF/M_* for the entire ranges of galaxy parameters. This joint scaling relation suggests that the coronae are self-regulated by the combination of gravitational confinement and feedback. But SN appears to be the primary heating source, because about half of our galaxies are not massive enough to allow for the accretion to play a major role. The commonly low eta further suggests that the bulk of the SN energy likely flows out into large-scale galactic halos for essentially all the galaxies. Such ubiquitous outflows could have profound implications for understanding the ecosystem, hence the evolution of galaxies.
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