Soft X-ray and ultra-violet metal-line emission from the gas around galaxies
Freeke van de Voort (1), Joop Schaye (1) ((1) Leiden Observatory,, Leiden University)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to assess the detectability of metal-line emissions in the gas surrounding galaxies across different wavelengths, revealing potential for future observations to probe galactic haloes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed predictions of soft X-ray and UV metal-line emission profiles around galaxies, informing future observational strategies.
Findings
X-ray telescopes can detect O VIII emission out to 80% of Rvir for groups and clusters.
UV telescopes can detect C III emission out to 0.2-0.6 Rvir at z=0.25.
Emission is biased towards high density, metallicity, and specific temperature ranges.
Abstract
(Abridged) A large fraction of the gas in galactic haloes has temperatures between 10^4.5 and 10^7 K. At these temperatures, cooling is dominated by metal-line emission if the metallicity Z>~0.1 Zsun. We explore the detectability of several lines using large cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations. We stack surface brightness maps centred on galaxies to calculate the expected mean surface brightness profiles for different halo masses. Assuming a detection limit of 10^-1 photon s^-1 cm^-2 sr^-1, proposed X-ray telescopes can detect O VIII emission from z=0.125 out to 80% of the virial radius (Rvir) of groups and clusters and out to 0.4Rvir for haloes with masses Mhalo=10^12-13 Msun. Emission lines from C VI, N VII, O VII, and Ne X can be detected out to smaller radii, 0.1-0.5Rvir. With a detection limit of 10^-20 erg s^-1 cm^-2 arcsec^-2, future UV telescopes can detect C III emission…
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