The multiphase circumgalactic medium traced by low metal ions in EAGLE zoom simulations
Benjamin D. Oppenheimer, Joop Schaye, Robert A. Crain, Jessica K., Werk, Alexander J. Richings

TL;DR
This study uses advanced cosmological simulations to analyze the multiphase circumgalactic medium traced by low metal ions, successfully reproducing observed trends and revealing the structure, dynamics, and metal content of the CGM around different galaxy types.
Contribution
The paper introduces detailed EAGLE zoom simulations with non-equilibrium ionization to model low ion absorbers in the CGM, aligning well with observations and clarifying the physical state of CGM clouds.
Findings
Low ion column densities are largely independent of galaxy star formation rate.
The CGM contains a significant metal reservoir primarily at 10-100 kpc from galaxies.
A two-phase structure exists in the inner CGM, with cool clouds embedded in hot ambient gas.
Abstract
We explore the circumgalactic metal content traced by commonly observed low ion absorbers, including C II, Si II, Si III, Si IV, and Mg II. We use a set of cosmological hydrodynamical zoom simulations run with the EAGLE model and including a non-equilibrium ionization and cooling module that follows 136 ions. The simulations of z~0.2 L* (M_200=10^11.7-10^12.3 Msol) haloes hosting star-forming galaxies and group-sized (M_200=10^12.7-10^13.3 Msol) haloes hosting mainly passive galaxies reproduce key trends observed by the COS-Halos survey-- low ion column densities show 1) little dependence on galaxy specific star formation rate, 2) a patchy covering fraction indicative of 10^4 K clouds with a small volume filling factor, and 3) a declining covering fraction as impact parameter increases from 20-160 kpc. Simulated Si II, Si III, Si IV, C II, and C III column densities show good agreement…
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