4.7 Article

On the halo occupation of dark baryons

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 679, Issue 2, Pages 1218-1231

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/587432

Keywords

cosmology : theory; dark matter; galaxies : evolution; quasars : absorption lines

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We introduce a new technique that adopts the halo occupation framework for understanding the origin of QSO absorption-line systems. Our initial study focuses specifically on Mg II absorbers. We construct a model of the gaseous content in which the absorption equivalent width W(r) is determined by the amount of cold gas, in the form of discrete clouds, along a sight line through a halo. The two quantities that we specify per halo in the model are ( 1) the mean absorption strength per unit surface mass density A(W)(M), and (2) the mean covering factor kappa(g)( M) of the gaseous clouds. These parameters determine the conditional probability distribution of Wr as a function of halo mass, P(W(r)vertical bar M). Two empirical measurements are applied to constrain the model: (1) the absorber frequency distribution function and ( 2) the W(r)-dependent clustering amplitude. We find that the data demand a rapid transition in the gas content of halos at similar to 10(11.5) h(-1) M(circle dot), below which halos contain predominantly cold gas and beyond which gas becomes predominantly hot. In order to reproduce the observed overall strong clustering of the absorbers and the anticorrelation between W(r) and halo mass M, roughly 5% of gas in halos up to 10(14) h(-1) M(circle dot) is required to be cold. The gas covering factor is near unity over a wide range of halo masses, supporting the idea that Mg II systems probe an unbiased sample of typical galaxies. We discuss the implications of our study in the contexts of mass assembly of distant galaxies and the origin of QSO absorption-line systems.

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