Observable Signatures of the low-z Circum-Galactic and Inter-Galactic Medium : UV Line Emission in Simulations
S. Frank, Y. Rasera, D. Vibert, B. Milliard, A. Popping, J. Blaizot,, S. Courty, J. M. Deharveng, C. Peroux, R. Teyssier, and C. D. Martin

TL;DR
This study predicts UV line emissions from intergalactic and circumgalactic gas using simulations, assessing their observability with current and future UV instruments to inform observational strategies.
Contribution
First predictions of UV line emission from intergalactic and circumgalactic gas at low redshift using AMR simulations, focusing on observability with upcoming UV instruments.
Findings
Compact sources dominate flux in UV lines.
Faint IGM emission remains challenging for current instruments.
CGM emission is more detectable and informative.
Abstract
We present for the first time predictions for UV line emission of intergalactic and circumgalactic gas from Adaptive Mesh Resolution (AMR) Large Scale Structure (LSS) simulations at redshifts 0.3<z<1.2, with specific emphasis on observability with current and near-future UV instrumentation. In three transitions of interest (Lya, OVI and CIV) there is a clear bimodality in the type of objects : the overwhelming majority of flux stems from discrete, compact sources, while a much larger volume fraction is filled by more tenuous gas. We characterise both object types with regard to number density, physical size and shape, brightness, luminosity, velocity structure, mass, temperature, ionisation state, and metal content. Degrading AMR grids to characteristic resolutions of available (such as FIREBall) or foreseeable instrumentation, allows to assess which inferences can be drawn from…
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