Are cold flows detectable with metal absorption lines?
Taysun Kimm, Adrianne Slyz, Julien Devriendt, Christophe Pichon

TL;DR
This study assesses the feasibility of detecting cold gas filaments feeding galaxies at high redshift through metal absorption lines, concluding that such detection is extremely challenging due to low covering fractions and weak signals.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of the detectability of cold filaments via low-ionisation metal absorption lines, highlighting observational difficulties.
Findings
Cold gas covering fraction in halos is around 5%.
Interstellar medium absorption dominates and masks filament signals.
Detection likelihood is very low unless filaments are perfectly aligned.
Abstract
[Abridged] Cold gas flowing within the "cosmic web" is believed to be an important source of fuel for star formation at high redshift. However, the presence of such filamentary gas has never been observationally confirmed. In this work, we investigate in detail whether such cold gas is detectable using low-ionisation metal absorption lines, such as CII \lambda1334 as this technique has a proven observational record for detecting gaseous structures. Using a large statistical sample of galaxies from the Mare Nostrum N-body+AMR cosmological simulation, we find that the typical covering fraction of the dense, cold gas in 10^12 Msun haloes at z~2.5 is lower than expected (~5%). In addition, the absorption signal by the interstellar medium of the galaxy itself turns out to be so deep and so broad in velocity space that it completely drowns that of the filamentary gas. A detectable signal…
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