4.7 Article

MAGIICAT III. INTERPRETING SELF-SIMILARITY OF THE CIRCUMGALACTIC MEDIUM WITH VIRIAL MASS USING Mg II ABSORPTION

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 779, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/779/1/87

Keywords

galaxies: halos; quasars: absorption lines

Funding

  1. NASA's Space Telescope Science Institute [HST-GO-12252]
  2. NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  3. NASA New Mexico Space Grant Consortium (NMSGC) Research Enhancement Grant
  4. NMSGC Graduate Fellowship
  5. three-year Graduate Research Enhancement Grant (GREG)
  6. Office of the Vice President for Research at New Mexico State University

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In Churchill et al., we used halo abundance matching applied to 182 galaxies in the Mg II Absorber-Galaxy Catalog (MAGIICAT) and showed that the mean Mg II gamma 2796 equivalent width follows a tight inverse-square power law, W-r(2796) proportional to (D/R-vir) (2), with projected location relative to the galaxy virial radius and that the Mg II absorption covering fraction is effectively invariant with galaxy virial mass, M-h, over the range 10.7 <= log M-h/M-circle dot <= 13.9. In this work, we explore multivariate relationships between W-r(2796), virial mass, impact parameter, virial radius, and the theoretical cooling radius that further elucidate self-similarity in the cool/warm (T = 10(4)-10(4.5) K) circumgalactic medium (CGM) with virial mass. We show that virial mass determines the extent and strength of the Mg II absorbing gas such that the mean W-r(2796) increases with virial mass at fixed distance while decreasing with galactocentric distance for fixed virial mass. The majority of the absorbing gas resides within D similar or equal to 0.3 R-vir, independent of both virial mass and minimum absorption threshold; inside this region, and perhaps also in the region 0.3 < D/R-vir <= 1, the mean W-r(2796) is independent of virial mass. Contrary to absorber-galaxy cross-correlation studies, we show there is no anti-correlation between W-r(2796) and virial mass. We discuss how simulations and theory constrained by observations support self-similarity of the cool/warm CGM via the physics governing star formation, gas-phase metal enrichment, recycling efficiency of galactic scale winds, filament and merger accretion, and overdensity of local environment as a function of virial mass.

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