Constraints on Hydrodynamical Subgrid Models from Quasar Absorption Line Studies of the Simulated Circumgalactic Medium
Cameron Hummels, Greg Bryan, Britton Smith, Matthew Turk

TL;DR
This study uses simulated quasar absorption lines to evaluate and calibrate different stellar feedback models in galaxy evolution simulations, highlighting challenges in reproducing observed ion distributions, especially for highly ionized oxygen.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach of using CGM absorption line comparisons to constrain and improve subgrid feedback models in cosmological simulations.
Findings
Models match low-ionization observations well
High-ionization oxygen (O VI) remains difficult to reproduce
Feedback intensity influences the match quality
Abstract
Cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy evolution are increasingly able to produce realistic galaxies, but the largest hurdle remaining is in constructing subgrid models that accurately describe the behavior of stellar feedback. As an alternate way to test and calibrate such models, we propose to focus on the circumgalactic medium. To do so, we generate a suite of adaptive-mesh refinement (AMR) simulations for a Milky-Way-massed galaxy run to z=0, systematically varying the feedback implementation. We then post-process the simulation data to compute the absorbing column density for a wide range of common atomic absorbers throughout the galactic halo, including H I, Mg II, Si II, Si III, Si IV, C IV, N V, O VI, and O VII. The radial profiles of these atomic column densities are compared against several quasar absorption line studies, to determine if one feedback prescription is…
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