Bimodality of low-redshift circumgalactic O VI in non-equilibrium EAGLE zoom simulations
Benjamin D. Oppenheimer, Robert A. Crain, Joop Schaye, Alireza, Rahmati, Alexander J. Richings, James W. Trayford, Jason Tumlinson, Richard, G. Bower, Matthieu Schaller, Tom Theuns

TL;DR
This study uses advanced cosmological simulations to explore the bimodal distribution of O VI in the circumgalactic medium, revealing how halo temperature influences ionization states and correlates with galaxy star formation activity.
Contribution
It introduces non-equilibrium ionization modeling in EAGLE simulations, providing new insights into the ionization states and distribution of oxygen in galaxy haloes across different masses.
Findings
O VI column density peaks in Lstar galaxy haloes.
Higher halo temperatures shift oxygen to higher ionization states.
Most circumgalactic oxygen is in O VII, not O VI.
Abstract
We introduce a series of 20 cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of Lstar (M_200 =10^11.7 - 10^12.3 Msol) and group-sized (M_200 = 10^12.7 - 10^13.3 Msol) haloes run with the model used for the EAGLE project, which additionally includes a non-equilibrium ionization and cooling module that follows 136 ions. The simulations reproduce the observed correlation, revealed by COS-Halos at z~0.2, between O VI column density at impact parameters b < 150 kpc and the specific star formation rate (sSFR=SFR/Mstar) of the central galaxy at z~0.2. We find that the column density of circumgalactic O VI is maximal in the haloes associated with Lstar galaxies, because their virial temperatures are close to the temperature at which the ionization fraction of O VI peaks (T~10^5.5 K). The higher virial temperature of group haloes (> 10^6 K) promotes oxygen to higher ionization states, suppressing the O…
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