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We use cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to examine the physical properties of the gas in the circumgalactic media (CGM) of star-forming galaxies as a function of angular orientation. We utilise TNG50 of the IllustrisTNG project, as well as the EAGLE simulation to show that observable properties of CGM gas correlate with azimuthal angle, defined as the galiocentric angle with respect to the central galaxy. Both simulations are in remarkable agreement in predicting a strong modulation of flow rate direction with azimuthal angle: inflow is more substantial along the galaxy major axis, while outflow is strongest along the minor axis. The absolute rates are noticeably larger for higher (log(M_* / M_sun) ~ 10.5) stellar mass galaxies, up to an order of magnitude compared to M^dot < 1 M_sun/yr/sr for log(M_* / M_sun) ~ 9.5 objects. Notwithstanding the different numerical and physical models, both TNG50 and EAGLE predict that the average metallicity of the CGM is higher along the minor versus major axes of galaxies. The angular signal is robust across a wide range of galaxy stellar mass 8.5 < log(M_* / M_sun) < 10.5 at z<1. This azimuthal dependence is particularly clear at larger impact parameters b > 100 kpc. Our results present a global picture whereby, despite the numerous mixing processes, there is a clear angular dependence of the CGM metallicity. We make forecasts for future large survey programs that will be able to compare against these expectations. Indeed, characterising the kinematics, spatial distribution and metal content of CGM gas is key to a full understanding of the exchange of mass, metals, and energy between galaxies and their surrounding environments.
Using a sample of dwarf galaxies observed using the VIMOS IFU on the VLT, we investigate the mass-metallicity relation (MZR) as a function of star formation rate (FMR$_{text{SFR}}$) as well as HI-gas mass (FMR$_{text{HI}}$). We combine our IFU data w
We explore how environment affects the metallicity of the circumgalactic medium (CGM) using 13 low mass galaxy groups (2-5 galaxies) at $langle z_{abs}rangle=0.25$ identified near background quasars. Using quasar spectra from HST/COS and from Keck/HI
The circumgalactic medium (CGM) remains one of the least constrained components of galaxies and as such has significant potential for advancing galaxy formation theories. In this work, we vary the extragalactic ultraviolet background for a high-resol
Using our measurements of the H$alpha$ emission line flux originating in the cool (T $sim10^4$ K) gas that populates the halos of galaxies, we build a joint model to describe mass of the cool circumgalactic medium (CGM) as a function of galactic stel
We investigate whether the dust content of the circum-galactic medium (CGM) depends on the location of the quasar sightline with respect to the galaxy major-axis using 13 galaxy-MgII absorber pairs (9 - 81 kpc distance) from the MusE GAs FLOw and Win