Intergalactic Dust Extinction in Hydrodynamic Cosmological Simulations
Ying Zu (OSU), David H. Weinberg (OSU), Romeel Dav\'e (Arizona), Mark, Fardal (UMass), Neal Katz (UMass), Dusan Keres (Harvard), Benjamin D., Oppenheimer (Leiden)

TL;DR
This paper models intergalactic dust extinction observed via quasar color changes using hydrodynamic cosmological simulations, exploring dust distribution, metal tracing, and implications for future cosmology measurements.
Contribution
It introduces theoretical models linking intergalactic dust to observed quasar reddening, emphasizing the role of galactic winds and dust-metal ratios in simulations.
Findings
Dust traces intergalactic metals with a dust-to-metal ratio of 0.24.
Half of the reddening occurs more than 100Kpc/h from massive galaxies.
Predicted visual extinction is ~0.0133 mag out to z=0.5.
Abstract
Recently Menard et al. detected a subtle but systematic change in the mean color of quasars as a function of their projected separation from foreground galaxies, extending to comoving separations of ~10Mpc/h, which they interpret as a signature of reddening by intergalactic dust. We present theoretical models of this remarkable observation, using SPH cosmological simulations of a (50Mpc/h)^3 volume. Our primary model uses a simulation with galactic winds and assumes that dust traces the intergalactic metals. The predicted galaxy-dust correlation function is similar in form to the galaxy-mass correlation function, and reproducing the MSFR data requires a dust-to-metal mass ratio of 0.24, about half the value in the Galactic ISM. Roughly half of the reddening arises in dust that is more than 100Kpc/h from the nearest massive galaxy. We also examine a simulation with no galactic winds,…
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