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Recent suggestions of a photon underproduction crisis (Kollmeier etal 2014) have generated concern over the intensity and spectrum of ionizing photons in the metagalactic ultraviolet background (UVB). The balance of hydrogen photoionization and recom bination determines the opacity of the low-redshift intergalactic medium (IGM). We calibrate the hydrogen photoionization rate ($Gamma_{rm H}$) by comparing {it Hubble Space Telescope} spectroscopic surveys of the low-redshift column density distribution of HI absorbers and the observed ($z < 0.4$) mean Lya flux decrement, $D_A = (0.014)(1+z)^{2.2}$, to new cosmological simulations. The distribution, $f(N_{rm HI}, z) equiv d^2 {cal N} / d(log N_{rm HI}) dz$, is consistent with an increased UVB that includes contributions from both quasars and galaxies. Our recommended fit, $Gamma_{rm H}(z) = (4.6 times 10^{-14}$ s$^{-1})(1+z)^{4.4}$ for $0 < z < 0.47$, corresponds to unidirectional LyC photon flux $Phi_0 approx 5700$~cm$^{-2}$~s$^{-1}$ at $z = 0$. This flux agrees with observed IGM metal ionization ratios (CIII/CIV and SiIII/SiIV) and suggests a 25-30% contribution of Lya absorbers to the cosmic baryon inventory. The primary uncertainties in the low-redshift UVB are the contribution from massive stars in galaxies and the LyC escape fraction ($f_{rm esc}$), a highly directional quantity that is difficult to constrain statistically. We suggest that both quasars and low-mass starburst galaxies are important contributors to the ionizing UVB at $z < 2$. Their additional ionizing flux would resolve any crisis in photon underproduction.
Using the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph aboard the Hubble Space Telescope, we measured the abundances of six ions (C III, C IV, Si III, Si IV, N V, O VI) in the low-redshift (z < 0.4) intergalactic medium and explored C and Si ionization corrections fr om adjacent ion stages. Both C IV and Si IV have increased in abundance by a factor of ~10 from z = 5.5 to the present. We derive ion mass densities, (rho_ion) = (Omega_ion)(rho_cr) with Omega_ion expressed relative to closure density. Our models of the mass-abundance ratios, (Si III / Si IV) = 0.67(+0.35,-0.19), (C III / C IV) = 0.70(+0.43,-0.20), and (Omega_CIII + Omega_CIV) / (Omega_SiIII + Omega_SiIV) = 4.9(+2.2,-1.1), are consistent with a hydrogen photoionization rate Gamma_H = (8 +/- 2) x 10^{-14} s^{-1} at z < 0.4 and specific intensity I_0 = (3 +/- 1) x 10^{-23} erg/(cm^2 s Hz sr) at the Lyman limit. We find mean photoionization parameter log U = -1.5 +/- 0.4, baryon overdensity Delta_b = 200 +/- 50, and Si/C enhanced to three times its solar ratio (enhancement of alpha-process elements). We compare these metal abundances to the expected IGM enrichment and abundances in higher photoionized states of carbon (C V) and silicon (Si V, Si VI, Si VII). Our ionization modeling infers IGM metal densities of (5.4 +/- 0.5) x 10^5 M_sun / Mpc^3 in the photoionized Lya forest traced by the C and Si ions and (9.1 +/- 0.6) x 10^5 M_sun / Mpc^3 in hotter gas traced by O VI. Combining both phases, the heavy elements in the IGM have mass density rho_Z = (1.5 +/- 0.8) x 10^6 M_sun / Mpc^3 or Omega_Z = 10^{-5}. This represents 10 +/- 5 percent of the metals produced by (6 +/- 2) x 10^8 M_sun / Mpc^3 of integrated star formation with yield y_m = 0.025 +/- 0.010. The missing metals at low redshift may reside within galaxies and in undetected ionized gas in galaxy halos and circumgalactic medium.
87 - Joseph A. Collins , 2009
We describe an ultraviolet spectroscopic survey of interstellar high-velocity cloud (HVC) absorption in the strong 1206.500 Angstrom line of Si III using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph aboard the Hubble Space Telescope. Because the Si III l ine is 4-5 times stronger than O VI 1031.926, it provides a sensitive probe of ionized gas down to column densities N(Si III) = 5x10^11 cm^-2 at Si III equivalent width 10 mA. We detect high-velocity Si III over (91+/-4)% of the sky (53 of 58 sight lines), and 59% of the HVCs show negative LSR velocities. Per sight line, the mean HVC column density is <log N(SiIII)> = 13.19 +/- 0.45, while the mean for all 90 velocity components is 12.92 +/- 0.46. Lower limits due to Si III line saturation are included in this average, so the actual mean/median values are even higher. The Si III appears to trace an extensive ionized component of Galactic halo gas at temperatures 10^4.0 K to 10^4.5 K indicative of a cooling flow. Photoionization models suggest that typical Si III absorbers with 12.5 < log N(Si III) < 13.5 have total hydrogen column densities N(H) = 10^18 to 10^19 cm^-2 for gas of hydrogen density n(H) = 0.1 cm^(-3) and 10% solar metallicity. With typical neutral fractions N(HI)/N(H) = 0.01, these HVCs may elude even long duration 21-cm observations at Arecibo, the EVLA, and other radio facilities. However, if Si III is associated with higher density gas, n(H) > 1 cm^(-3), the corresponding neutral hydrogen could be visible in deep observations. This reservoir of ionized gas may contain 10^8 M_sun and produce a mass infall rate of 1 M_sun/yr to the Galactic disk.
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