Probing the IGM/Galaxy Connection V: On the Origin of Lya and OVI Absorption at z<0.2
J. Xavier Prochaska (1), B. Weiner (2), H.-W. Chen (3), J.S. Mulchaey, (4), K.L. Cooksey (5) ((1) UCO/Lick Observatories, UC Santa Cruz, (2) U., Arizona, (3) U. Chicago, (4) Carnegie Observatories, (5) MIT)

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of Lya and OVI absorption in the low-redshift intergalactic medium, revealing their association with galaxy halos, the circumgalactic medium, and the cosmic web, and clarifying the sources of these absorbers.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence on the distribution and origin of Lya and OVI absorbers, distinguishing between galaxy-associated gas and the cosmic web at low redshift.
Findings
High covering fraction of Lya absorption around galaxies within 300kpc.
Most strong Lya absorbers originate from galaxy halos and the cosmic web.
OVI absorption is mainly associated with galaxy halos and the circumgalactic medium.
Abstract
We analyze the association of galaxies to Lya and OVI absorption, the most commonly detected transitions in the low-z intergalactic medium (IGM), in the fields of 14 quasars with z_em = 0.06-0.57. Confirming previous studies, we observe a high covering fraction for Lya absorption to impact parameter rho = 300kpc: 33/37 of our L>0.01L* galaxies show Lya equivalent width W_Lya>50mA. Galaxies of all luminosity L>0.01L* and spectral type are surrounded by a diffuse and ionized circumgalactic medium (CGM), whose baryonic mass is estimated at ~10^(10.5 +/- 0.3) Msun for a constant N_H. The virialized halos and extended CGM of present-day galaxies are responsible for most strong Lya absorbers (W_Lya > 300mA) but cannot reproduce the majority of observed lines in the Lya forest. We conclude that the majority of Lya absorption with W_Lya=30-300mA occurs in the cosmic web predicted by…
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