Characterizing Circumgalactic Gas around Massive Ellipticals at z ~ 0.4 I. Initial Results
Hsiao-Wen Chen, Fakhri S. Zahedy, Sean D. Johnson, Rebecca M. Pierce,, Yun-Hsin Huang, Benjamin J. Weiner, and Jean-Rene Gauthier

TL;DR
This study uses HST COS observations to analyze the circumgalactic gas around massive, quiescent elliptical galaxies at z~0.4, revealing widespread cool, metal-enriched gas with significant neutral hydrogen and intermediate ions, challenging previous assumptions about such halos.
Contribution
First comprehensive survey of halo gas around massive ellipticals at z~0.4, showing prevalent cool, enriched gas with detailed ionic measurements and covering fractions.
Findings
High neutral hydrogen column densities are common in these halos.
Massive quiescent halos contain widespread cool, metal-enriched gas.
Intermediate ions like CIII and SiIII are prominent, with high covering fractions.
Abstract
We present a new Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) absorption-line survey to study halo gas around 16 luminous red galaxies (LRGs) at z=0.21-0.55. The LRGs are selected uniformly with stellar mass Mstar>1e11 Msun and no prior knowledge of the presence/absence of any absorption features. Based on observations of the full Lyman series, we obtain accurate measurements of neutral hydrogen column density N(HI) and find that high-N(HI) gas is common in these massive quiescent halos with a median of <log N(HI)> = 16.6 at projected distances d<~160 kpc. We measure a mean covering fraction of optically-thick gas with log N(HI)>~17.2 of <kappa>LLS=0.44^{+0.12}_{-0.11} at d<~160 kpc and <kappa>LLS=0.71^{+0.11}_{-0.20} at d<~100 kpc. The line-of-sight velocity separations between the HI absorbing gas and LRGs are characterized by a mean and dispersion of…
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