4.7 Article

METAL-ION ABSORPTION IN CONDUCTIVELY EVAPORATING CLOUDS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 718, Issue 2, Pages 1315-1331

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/718/2/1315

Keywords

atomic processes; conduction; ISM: general; plasmas; quasars: absorption lines

Funding

  1. US-Israel Binational Science Foundation (BSF) [2002317]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [STE1869/1-1.GE625/15-1]
  3. National Science Foundation [AST0908553]
  4. Chandra X-ray Center, NASA [PF8-90053, NAS8-03060]

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We present computations of the ionization structure and metal-absorption properties of thermally conductive interface layers that surround evaporating warm spherical clouds embedded in a hot medium. We rely on the analytical steady-state formalism of Dalton and Balbus to calculate the temperature profile in the evaporating gas, and we explicitly solve the time-dependent ionization equations for H, He, C, N, O, Si, and S in the conductive interface. We include photoionization by an external field. We estimate how departures from equilibrium ionization affect the resonance-line cooling efficiencies in the evaporating gas, and determine the conditions for which radiative losses may be neglected in the solution for the evaporation dynamics and temperature profile. Our results indicate that nonequilibrium cooling significantly increases the value of the saturation parameter sigma(0) at which radiative losses begin to affect the flow dynamics. As applications, we calculate the ion fractions and projected column densities arising in the evaporating layers surrounding dwarf-galaxy-scale objects that are also photoionized by metagalactic radiation. We compare our results to the UV metal-absorption column densities observed in local highly ionized metal absorbers, located in the Galactic corona or intergalactic medium. Conductive interfaces significantly enhance the formation of high ions such as C3+, N4+, and O5+ relative to purely photoionized clouds, especially for clouds embedded in a high-pressure corona. However, the enhanced columns are still too low to account for the OVI columns (similar to 10(14) cm(-2)) observed in the local high-velocity metal-ion absorbers. We find that column densities larger than similar to 10(13) cm(-2) cannot be produced in evaporating clouds. Our results do support the conclusion of Savage and Lehner that absorption due to evaporating OVI likely occurs in the local interstellar medium, with characteristic columns of similar to 10(13) cm(-2).

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