# A comparison of observed and simulated absorption from HI, CIV, and SiIV   around $z\approx2$ star-forming galaxies suggests redshift-space distortions   are due to inflows

**Authors:** Monica L. Turner, Joop Schaye, Robert A. Crain, Gwen Rudie, Charles C., Steidel, Allison Strom, Tom Theuns

arXiv: 1703.00086 · 2017-08-09

## TL;DR

This study compares observed and simulated absorption features around $zoughly 2$ star-forming galaxies, finding that redshift-space distortions are mainly due to gas inflows, with simulations closely matching observations.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that the EAGLE simulation accurately reproduces observed absorption properties and clarifies that redshift-space distortions are caused by inflowing gas rather than outflows.

## Key findings

- EAGLE simulations match observed HI and metal-line absorption features.
- Redshift-space distortions are primarily due to gas inflows.
- Infall velocities depend on halo mass, not stellar mass.

## Abstract

We study HI and metal-line absorption around $z\approx2$ star-forming galaxies by comparing an analysis of data from the Keck Baryonic Structure Survey to mock spectra generated from the EAGLE cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations. We extract sightlines from the simulations and compare the properties of the absorption by HI, CIV and SiIV around simulated and observed galaxies using pixel optical depths. We mimic the resolution, pixel size, and signal-to-noise ratio of the observations, as well as the distributions of impact parameters and galaxy redshift errors. We find that the EAGLE reference model is in excellent agreement with the observations. In particular, the simulation reproduces the high metal-line optical depths found at small galactocentric distances, the optical depth enhancements out to impact parameters of 2 proper Mpc, and the prominent redshift-space distortions which we find are due to peculiar velocities rather than redshift errors. The agreement is best for halo masses $\sim10^{12.0}$ M$_\odot$, for which the observed and simulated stellar masses also agree most closely. We examine the median ion mass-weighted radial gas velocities around the galaxies, and find that most of the gas is infalling, with the infall velocity depending on halo rather than stellar mass. From this we conclude that the observed redshift-space distortions are predominantly caused by infall rather than outflows.

## Full text

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## Figures

61 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.00086/full.md

## References

63 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.00086/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.00086