Metal-line emission from the warm-hot intergalactic medium: I. Soft X-rays
Serena Bertone (UCSC-IMPS), Joop Schaye (Leiden), Claudio Dalla, Vecchia (MPE, Leiden), C.M. Booth (Leiden), Tom Theuns (Durham), Robert P.C., Wiersma (MPA, Leiden)

TL;DR
This paper predicts soft X-ray emission lines from the warm-hot intergalactic medium using cosmological simulations, highlighting their potential to image gas flows around galaxies despite not accounting for the total baryon content.
Contribution
It provides robust predictions for metal-line soft X-ray emission from the WHIM, exploring dependence on physical models and identifying key emission lines and their relation to gas properties.
Findings
OVIII 18.97A is the strongest emission line.
Emission correlates with gas density and metallicity.
Detectable emission traces overdense, metal-rich gas around galaxies.
Abstract
Emission lines from metals offer one of the most promising ways to detect the elusive warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM; 10^5 K<T<10^7 K), which is thought to contain a substantial fraction of the baryons in the low-redshift Universe. We present predictions for the soft X-ray line emission from the WHIM using a subset of cosmological simulations from the OverWhelmingly Large Simulations (OWLS) project. We use the OWLS models to test the dependence of the predicted emission on a range of physical prescriptions, such as cosmology, gas cooling and feedback from star formation and accreting black holes. Provided that metal-line cooling is taken into account, the models give surprisingly similar results, indicating that the predictions are robust. Soft X-ray lines trace the hotter part of the WHIM (T>10^6 K). We find that the OVIII 18.97A is the strongest emission line, with a predicted…
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