Enriching the hot circumgalactic medium
Robert A. Crain, Ian G. McCarthy, Joop Schaye, Carlos S. Frenk, Tom, Theuns

TL;DR
This paper investigates the metal enrichment of the hot circumgalactic medium (CGM) in galaxy formation, revealing that X-ray luminosity-weighted metallicity appears near-solar due to stellar recycling, despite the overall gas being metal-poor.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the observed near-solar metallicity of the hot CGM results from metal-rich stellar recycling, contrasting with the metal-poor mass-weighted gas in simulations.
Findings
X-ray luminosity-weighted metallicity is near solar.
Metals are primarily ejected by in-situ star formation.
Metallicity gradients develop inside-out during galaxy assembly.
Abstract
Models of galaxy formation in a CDM universe predict that massive galaxies are surrounded by a hot, quasi-hydrostatic circumgalactic corona of slowly cooling gas, predominantly accreted from the IGM. This prediction is borne out by the cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of Crain et al., which reproduce scaling relations between the X-ray and optical properties of nearby disc galaxies. Such coronae are metal poor, but observations of the X-ray emitting circumgalactic medium (CGM) of local galaxies typically indicate enrichment to near-solar iron abundance, potentially signalling a shortcoming in galaxy formation models. We show here that, while the hot CGM of galaxies formed in the simulations is metal poor in a mass-weighted sense, its X-ray luminosity-weighted metallicity is often close to solar. This bias arises because the soft X-ray emissivity of a typical 0.1 keV corona is…
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