The Azimuthal Dependence of Outflows and Accretion Detected Using OVI Absorption
Glenn G. Kacprzak, Sowgat Muzahid, Christopher W. Churchill, Nikole M., Nielsen, Jane C. Charlton

TL;DR
This study reveals a bimodal azimuthal distribution of OVI gas around galaxies, showing higher absorption along minor and major axes linked to outflows and inflows, with implications for understanding the circumgalactic medium's structure.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of azimuthal dependence of OVI absorption, highlighting the geometric and star-formation related factors influencing CGM gas distribution.
Findings
OVI absorption is azimuthally dependent, concentrated near galaxy axes.
Higher EWs are observed along the minor axis, indicating outflows.
Red and blue galaxies show different OVI distribution patterns.
Abstract
We report a bimodality in the azimuthal angle () distribution of gas around galaxies traced by OVI absorption. We present the mean probability distribution function of 29 HST-imaged OVI absorbing (EW>0.1A) and 24~non-absorbing (EW<0.1A) isolated galaxies (0.08<z<0.67) within 200kpc of background quasars. We show that EW is anti-correlated with impact parameter and OVI covering fraction decreases from 80% within 50kpc to 33% at 200kpc. The presence of OVI absorption is azimuthally dependent and occurs between of the galaxy projected major axis and within of the projected minor axis. We find higher EWs along the projected minor axis with weaker EWs along the project major axis. Highly inclined galaxies have the lowest covering fractions due to minimized outflow/inflow cross-section geometry. Absorbing galaxies also have bluer colors while…
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