4.6 Review

Atomic hydrogen gas in dark matter minihalos and the compact high-velocity clouds

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 143, Issue 2, Pages 419-453

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/343032

Keywords

dark matter; Galaxy : evolution; Galaxy : formation; Galaxy : general; intergalactic medium; Local Group

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We calculate the coupled hydrostatic and ionization structures of spherically symmetric, pressure-supported gas clouds that are confined by gravitationally dominant dark matter (DM) minihalos and by an external bounding pressure provided by a hot medium. We focus on clouds that are photoionized and heated by the present-day background metagalactic field and determine the conditions for the formation of warm (WNM) and multiphased (CNM/WNM) neutral atomic hydrogen ( H I) cores in the DM-dominated clouds. We consider LambdaCDM halos with cuspy (NFW) and constant density (Burkert) cores. We compute models for a wide range of halo masses, total cloud gas masses, and external bounding pressures. We present models for the pressure-supported H I structures observed in the Local Group dwarf irregular galaxies Leo A and Sag DIG. We find that the hydrogen gas becomes neutral for projected H I column densities exceeding 10(19) cm(-2). We identify the H I cloud boundaries observed in Leo A and Sag DIG with the ionization fronts, and we derive an upper limit of P-HIM/k less than or similar to 100 cm(-3) K for the ambient pressure of the intergalactic medium in the Local Group. The observed H I gas scale heights in Leo A and Sag DIG imply characteristic DM densities of 1.2 amu cm(-3) (or 0.03 M-. pc(-3)), consistent with the DM densities previously inferred via H I rotation curve studies of dwarf and low surface brightness galaxies. Leo A and Sag DIG obey the scaling correlations that are expected for typical (median) DM halos in a LambdaCDM cosmology, provided that the halos contain constant density cores, as suggested by Burkert. We construct explicit minihalo'' models for the multiphased ( and low-metallicity) compact high-velocity H I clouds (CHVCs). If the CHVC halos are drawn from the same family of halos that successfully reproduce the dwarf galaxy observations, then the CHVCs must be circumgalactic'' objects, with characteristic distances of 150 kpc. For such systems we find that multiphased behavior occurs for peak WNM H I column densities between 2 x 10(19) and 1 x 10(20) cm(-2), consistent with observations. In contrast, if the CHVCs are extragalactic'' objects with distances e 750 kpc, then their associated halos must be very underconcentrated,'' with characteristic DM densities less than or similar to0.08 cm(-3), much smaller than expected for their mass and significantly smaller than observed in the dwarf galaxies. Furthermore, multiphased cores then require higher shielding columns. We favor the circumgalactic hypothesis. If the large population of CHVCs represent missing low-mass DM satellites '' of the Galaxy, then these H I clouds must be pressure confined to keep the gas neutral. For an implied CHVC minihalo scale velocity of v(s) = 12 km s(-1), the confining pressure must exceed similar to50 cm(-3) K. A hot (similar to2 x 10(6) K) Galactic corona could provide the required pressure at 150 kpc. Our static minihalo models are able to account for many properties of the CHVCs, including their observed peak H I columns, core sizes, and multiphased behavior. However, important difficulties remain, including the presence in some objects of extended low column density H I wings and Halpha emission line fluxes in several CHVCs that are significantly larger than expected.

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