Simple Models of Metal-Line Absorption and Emission from Cool Gas Outflows
J. Xavier Prochaska (1), Daniel Kasen (2), Kate Rubin (1) ((1) UC, Santa Cruz, UCO/Lick, (2) UC Berkeley)

TL;DR
This paper models cool gas outflows in galaxies, showing how resonance line emission affects absorption profiles and offers new diagnostics for galactic winds.
Contribution
It introduces Monte Carlo radiative transfer models that incorporate line emission effects, improving interpretation of galactic outflow observations.
Findings
Line emission reduces absorption equivalent width by up to 50%.
Ignoring emission can lead to underestimating gas covering fraction and optical depth.
Surface brightness profiles and line ratios serve as diagnostics for wind morphology and kinematics.
Abstract
We analyze the absorption and emission-line profiles produced by a set of simple, cool gas wind models motivated by galactic-scale outflow observations. We implement monte carlo radiative transfer techniques that track the propagation of scattered and fluorescent photons to generate 1D spectra and 2D spectral images. We focus on the MgII 2796,28303 doublet and FeII UV1 multiplet at ~2600A, but the results are applicable to other transitions that trace outflows (e.g. NaI, Lya, SiII). By design, the resonance transitions show blue-shifted absorption but one also predicts strong resonance and fine-structure line-emission at roughly the systemic velocity. This line-emission `fills-in' the absorption reducing the equivalent width by up to 50%, shift the absorption-lin centroid by tens of km/s, and reduce the effective opacity near systemic. Analysis of cool gas outflows that ignores this…
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