The effect of variations in the input physics on the cosmic distribution of metals predicted by simulations
Robert P.C. Wiersma, Joop Schaye, Tom Theuns

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to explore how various physical processes influence the distribution of metals across different cosmic gas phases at redshifts 0 and 2, highlighting the roles of galactic winds, cooling, and feedback.
Contribution
It systematically examines the impact of multiple physical processes on cosmic metal distribution, providing insights into their relative importance and observational consistency.
Findings
Stars and warm-hot IGM dominate metal reservoirs at z=0 and 2.
Metallicity of cold-warm IGM varies greatly with wind models.
ICM metallicity is insensitive to galactic winds.
Abstract
[Abridged] We investigate how a range of physical processes affect the cosmic metal distribution using a suite of cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations. Focusing on z = 0 and 2, we study the metallicities and metal mass fractions for stars as well as for the ISM, and several more diffuse gas phases. We vary the cooling rates, star formation law, structure of the ISM, galactic winds, feedback from AGN, reionization history, stellar IMF, and cosmology. In all models stars and the warm-hot IGM (WHIM) constitute the dominant repository of metals, while for z > 2 the ISM is also important. In models with galactic winds, predictions for the metallicities of the various phases vary at the factor of two level and are broadly consistent with observations. The exception is the cold-warm IGM, whose metallicity varies at the order of magnitude level if the prescription for galactic winds is…
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