Pressure Support vs. Thermal Broadening in the Lyman-alpha Forest I: Effects of the Equation of State on Longitudinal Structure
Molly S. Peeples (Ohio State University), David H. Weinberg (Ohio, State University), Romeel Dav\'e (University of Arizona), Mark A. Fardal, (University of Massachusetts), Neal Katz (University of Massachusetts)

TL;DR
This study distinguishes the effects of thermal broadening and pressure support on the Lyman-alpha forest, finding thermal effects dominate longitudinal structure while pressure influences transverse coherence.
Contribution
It demonstrates that thermal broadening primarily shapes the flux power spectrum, with pressure support affecting the transverse coherence, using simulations with varied temperature-density relations.
Findings
Flux power spectrum mainly determined by thermal broadening.
Pressure support influences transverse coherence in quasar pairs.
Thermal broadening dominates longitudinal structure in the Lyman-alpha forest.
Abstract
In the low density intergalactic medium (IGM) that gives rise to the Lyman-alpha forest, gas temperature and density are tightly correlated. The velocity scale of thermal broadening and the Hubble flow across the gas Jeans scale are of similar magnitude (Hlambda_J ~ sigma_th). To separate the effects of gas pressure support and thermal broadening on the Lya forest, we compare spectra extracted from two smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations evolved with different photoionization heating rates (and thus different Jeans scales), imposing different temperature-density relations on the evolved particle distributions. The turnover scales in the flux power spectrum and flux autocorrelation function are determined mainly by thermal broadening rather than pressure. However, the insensitivity to pressure arises partly from a cancellation effect with a sloped temperature-density…
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