Effect of radiative transfer on damped Lyman-alpha and Lyman limit systems in cosmological SPH simulations
Hidenobu Yajima (1), Jun-Hwan Choi (2), Kentaro Nagamine (3) ((1), Pennsylvania State University, (2) U. of Kentucky, (3) U. of Nevada, Las, Vegas)

TL;DR
This study investigates how local stellar radiation and UV background influence the properties and distribution of damped Lyman-alpha and Lyman limit systems at redshift 3 using cosmological SPH simulations with radiative transfer modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a radiative transfer post-processing method that accurately models the effects of stellar radiation and UV background on DLAs and LLSs in cosmological simulations.
Findings
UVB significantly reduces DLA and LLS cross sections.
A simple density threshold model reproduces observed column density distributions.
DLAs are typically found around star-forming regions at 10-30 kpc scales.
Abstract
We study the effect of local stellar radiation and UVB on the physical properties of DLAs and LLSs at z=3 using cosmological SPH simulations. We post-process our simulations with the ART code for radiative transfer of local stellar radiation and UVB. We find that the DLA and LLS cross sections are significantly reduced by the UVB, whereas the local stellar radiation does not affect them very much except in the low-mass halos. This is because clumpy high-density clouds near young star clusters effectively absorb most of the ionizing photons from young stars. We also find that the UVB model with a simple density threshold for self-shielding effect can reproduce the observed column density distribution function of DLAs and LLSs very well, and we validate this model by direct radiative transfer calculations of stellar radiation and UVB with high angular resolution. We show that, with a…
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