Characterizing the Circumgalactic Medium of Nearby Galaxies with HST/COS and HST/STIS Absorption-Line Spectroscopy
John T. Stocke, Brian A. Keeney, Charles W. Danforth, J. Michael, Shull, Cynthia S. Froning, James C. Green, Steven V. Penton, and Blair D., Savage

TL;DR
This study uses UV spectroscopy from HST to characterize the properties, mass, and distribution of the circumgalactic medium around nearby galaxies, revealing significant baryon reservoirs and the presence of hot intra-group gas.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of warm CGM cloud properties and mass estimates, highlighting the role of hot intra-group gas in the baryon census, which is a novel comprehensive analysis.
Findings
Warm CGM clouds contain 10-15% of galaxy baryons.
Most warm clouds are metal-bearing and gravitationally bound.
Hot intra-group gas may account for ~20% of cosmic baryons.
Abstract
The Circumgalactic Medium (CGM) of late-type galaxies is characterized using UV spectroscopy of 11 targeted QSO/galaxy pairs at z < 0.02 with the Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Origins Spectrograph and ~60 serendipitous absorber/galaxy pairs at z < 0.2 with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. CGM warm cloud properties are derived, including volume filling factors of 3-5%, cloud sizes of 0.1-30 kpc, masses of 10-1e8 solar masses and metallicities of 0.1-1 times solar. Almost all warm CGM clouds within 0.5 virial radii are metal-bearing and many have velocities consistent with being bound, "galactic fountain" clouds. For galaxies with L > 0.1 L*, the total mass in these warm CGM clouds approaches 1e10 solar masses, ~10-15% of the total baryons in massive spirals and comparable to the baryons in their parent galaxy disks. This leaves >50% of massive spiral-galaxy baryons "missing".…
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