Low-Redshift Lyman Limit Systems as Diagnostics of Cosmological Inflows and Outflows
Z. Hafen (1), C.-A. Faucher-Giguere (1), D. Angles-Alcazar (1), D., Keres (2), R. Feldmann (3,4), T. K. Chan (2), E. Quataert (3), N. Murray (5),, P. F. Hopkins (6) ((1) Northwestern, (2) UC San Diego, (3) UC Berkeley, (4), University of Zurich, (5) CITA, (6) Caltech)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze low-redshift Lyman limit systems, revealing their association with galaxy halos, inflows, outflows, and metallicity distributions, aligning well with observations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of LLSs at low redshift, linking their properties to galaxy halo mass, metallicity, and gas flows, which was not comprehensively done before.
Findings
Most LLSs are associated with halos of 10^10-10^12 Msun.
Simulated HI column densities match observational data.
LLS metallicity distribution is broad and unimodal.
Abstract
We use cosmological hydrodynamic simulations with stellar feedback from the FIRE project to study the physical nature of Lyman limit systems (LLSs) at z<1. At these low redshifts, LLSs are closely associated with dense gas structures surrounding galaxies, such as galactic winds, dwarf satellites, and cool inflows from the intergalactic medium. Our analysis is based on 14 zoom-in simulations covering the halo mass range M_h~10^9-10^13 Msun at z=0, which we convolve with the dark matter halo mass function to produce cosmological statistics. We find that the majority of cosmologically-selected LLSs are associated with halos in the mass range 10^10 < M_h < 10^12 Msun. The incidence and HI column density distribution of simulated absorbers with columns 10^16.2 < N_HI < 2x10^20 cm^-2 are consistent with observations. High-velocity outflows (with radial velocity exceeding the halo circular…
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