Absorption signatures of warm-hot gas at low redshift: OVI
Thorsten Tepper-Garcia, Philipp Richter, Joop Schaye, C. M. Booth,, Claudio Dalla Vecchia, Tom Theuns, Robert P.C. Wiersma

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze the physical properties and origins of low-redshift OVI absorbers, revealing their association with shock-heated, metal-enriched gas and highlighting limitations in current observational interpretations.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the physical conditions of OVI absorbers at low redshift and emphasizes the impact of sub-grid physics and metal distribution on their properties.
Findings
OVI absorbers mainly trace metal-enriched, shock-heated gas at specific densities and temperatures.
Simulations show a lack of strong OVI absorbers compared to observations.
Most OVI traces a small fraction of cosmic baryons and metals, linked to galactic winds.
Abstract
We investigate the origin and physical properties of OVI absorbers at low redshift (z = 0.25) using a subset of cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations from the OverWhelmingly Large Simulations (OWLS) project. Intervening OVI absorbers are believed to trace shock-heated gas in the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM) and may thus play a key role in the search for the missing baryons in the present-day Universe. When compared to observations, the predicted distributions of the different OVI line parameters (column density, Doppler parameter, rest equivalent width) from our simulations exhibit a lack of strong OVI absorbers. This suggests that physical processes on sub-grid scales (e.g. turbulence) may strongly influence the observed properties of OVI systems. We find that the intervening OVI absorption arises mainly in highly metal-enriched (0.1 << Z/Z_sun < 1) gas at typical…
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