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We demonstrate the presence of an extended and massive circumgalactic medium (CGM) around Messier 31 using archival HST COS ultraviolet spectroscopy of 18 QSOs projected within two virial radii of M31 (Rvir=300 kpc). We detect absorption from SiIII a t -300<vLSR}<-150 km/s toward all 3 sightlines at R<0.2Rvir, 3 of 4 sightlines at 0.8<R/Rvir<1.1, and possibly 1 of 11 at 1.1<R/Rvir<1.8. We present several arguments that the gas at these velocities observed in these directions originates from the CGM of M31 rather than the Local Group or Milky Way CGM or Magellanic Stream. We show that the dwarf galaxies located in the CGM of M31 have very similar velocities over similar projected distances from M31. We find a non-trivial relationship only at these velocities between the column densities (N) of all the ions and R, whereby N decreases with increasing R. Singly ionized species are only detected in the inner CGM of M31 at R<0.2Rvir. At R<0.8 Rvir, the covering fraction is close to unity for SiIII and CIV (fc~60%-97% at the 90% confidence level), but drops to fc<10-20% at R>Rvir. We show that the M31 CGM gas is bound, multiphase, predominantly ionized (i.e., HII>>HI), and becomes more highly ionized gas at larger R. We estimate using SiII, SiIII, and SiIV a CGM metal mass of at least 2x10^6 Msun and gas mass of >3x10^9(Zsun/Z) Msun within 0.2 Rvir, and possibly a factor ~10 larger within Rvir, implying substantial metal and gas masses in the CGM of M31. Compared with galaxies in the COS-Halos survey, the CGM of M31 appears to be quite typical for a L* galaxy.
We assess the metal content of the cool (10^4 K) circumgalactic medium (CGM) about galaxies at z<1 using an H I-selected sample of 28 Lyman limit systems (LLS, defined here as absorbers with 16.2<log N(H I)<18.5) observed in absorption against backgr ound QSOs by the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on-board the Hubble Space Telescope. The N(H I) selection avoids metallicity biases inherent in many previous studies of the low-redshift CGM. We compare the column densities of weakly ionized metal species (e.g., O II, Si II, Mg II) to N(H I) in the strongest H I component of each absorber. We find that the metallicity distribution of the LLS (and hence the cool CGM) is bimodal with metal-poor and metal-rich branches peaking at [X/H]=-1.6 and -0.3 (or about 2.5% and 50% solar metallicities). The cool CGM probed by these LLS is predominantly ionized. The metal-rich branch of the population likely traces winds, recycled outflows, and tidally stripped gas; the metal-poor branch has properties consistent with cold accretion streams thought to be a major source of fresh gas for star forming galaxies. Both branches have a nearly equal number of absorbers. Our results thus demonstrate there is a significant mass of previously-undiscovered cold metal-poor gas and confirm the presence of metal enriched gas in the CGM of z<1 galaxies.
85 - N. Lehner , W.F. Zech , J.C. Howk 2010
The cooling transition temperature gas in the interstellar medium (ISM), traced by the high ions, Si IV, C IV, N V, and O VI, helps to constrain the flow of energy from the hot ISM with T >10^6 K to the warm ISM with T< 2x10^4 K. We investigate the p roperties of this gas along the lines of sight to 38 stars in the Milky Way disk using 1.5-2.7 km/s resolution spectra of Si IV, C IV, and N V absorption from the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS), and 15 km/s resolution spectra of O VI absorption from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE). The absorption by Si IV and C IV exhibits broad and narrow components while only broad components are seen in N V and O VI. The narrow components imply gas with T<7x10^4 K and trace two distinct types of gas. The strong, saturated, and narrow Si IV and C IV components trace the gas associated with the vicinities of O-type stars and their supershells. The weaker narrow Si IV and C IV components trace gas in the general ISM that is photoionized by the EUV radiation from cooling hot gas or has radiatively cooled in a non-equilibrium manner from the transition temperature phase, but rarely the warm ionized medium (WIM) probed by Al III. The broad Si IV, C IV, N V, and O VI components trace collisionally ionized gas that is very likely undergoing a cooling transition from the hot ISM to the warm ISM. The cooling process possibly provides the regulation mechanism that produces N(C IV)/N(Si IV) = 3.9 +/- 1.9. The cooling process also produces absorption lines where the median and mean values of the line widths increase with the energy required to create the ion.
168 - N. Lehner , J. C. Howk 2009
Previous HST and FUSE observations have revealed highly ionized high-velocity clouds (HVCs) or more generally low HI column HVCs along extragalactic sightlines over 70-90% of the sky. The distances of these HVCs have remained largely unknown hamperin g to distinguish a Galactic origin (e.g., outflow, inflow) from a Local Group origin (e.g., warm-hot intergalactic medium). We present the first detection of highly ionized HVCs in the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) spectrum of the early-type star HS1914+7134 (l = 103, b=+24) located in the outer region of the Galaxy at 14.9 kpc. Two HVCs are detected in absorption at v_LSR = -118 and -180 km/s in several species, including CIV, SiIV, SiIII, CII, SiII, OI, but HI 21-cm emission is only seen at -118 km. Within 17 degrees of HS1914+7134, we found HVC absorption of low and high ions at similar velocities toward 5 extragalactic sight lines, suggesting that these HVCs are related. The component at -118 km/s is likely associated with the Outer Arm of the Milky Way. The highly ionized HVC at -180 km/s is an HVC plunging at high speed onto the thick disk of the Milky Way. This is the second detection of highly ionized HVCs toward Galactic stars, supporting a Galactic origin for at least some of these clouds.
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