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I present computations of the integrated column densities produced in the post-shock cooling layers and in the radiative precursors of partially-cooled fast shocks as a function of the shock age. The results are applicable to the shock-heated warm/hot intergalactic medium (WHIM) which is expected to be a major baryonic reservoir, and contain a large fraction of the so-called missing baryons. My computations indicate that readily observable amounts of intermediate and high ions, such as CIV, NV, and OVI are created in the precursors of young shocks, for which the shocked gas remains hot and difficult to observe. I suggest that such precursors may provide a way to identify and estimate the missing baryonic mass associated with the shocks. The absorption-line signatures predicted here may be used to construct ion-ratio diagrams, which will serve as diagnostics for the photoionized gas in the precursors. In my numerical models, the time-evolution of the shock structure, self-radiation, and associated metal-ion column densities are computed by a series of quasi-static models, each appropriate for a different shock age. The shock code used in this work calculates the nonequilibrium ionization and cooling, follows the radiative transfer of the shock self-radiation through the post-shock cooling layers, takes into account the resulting photoionization and heating rates, follows the dynamics of the cooling gas, and self-consistently computes the photoionization states in the precursor gas. I present a complete set of the age-dependent post-shock and precursor columns for all ionization states of the elements H, He, C, N, O, Ne, Mg, Si, S, and Fe, as functions of the shock velocity, gas metallicity, and magnetic field. I present my numerical results in convenient online tables.
We assess the possibility to detect the warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM) in emission and to characterize its physical conditions and spatial distribution through spatially resolved X-ray spectroscopy, in the framework of the recently proposed DIO
Today, the majority of the cosmic baryons in the Universe are not observed directly, leading to an issue of missing baryons at low redshift. Cosmological hydrodynamical simulations have indicated that a significant portion of them will be converted i
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We briefly review the use of UV absorption lines in the spectra of low-redshift QSOs for the study of the physical conditions, metallicity, and baryonic content of the low-z IGM, with emphasis on the missing baryons problem. Current results on the st