Kinematics of the Circumgalactic Medium of a $z = 0.77$ Galaxy from MgII Tomography
Kris Mortensen, Keerthi Vasan G.C., Tucker Jones, Claude-Andre, Faucher-Giguere, Ryan Sanders, Richard S. Ellis, Nicha Leethochawalit, and, Daniel P. Stark

TL;DR
This study uses gravitational lensing to map the spatial and kinematic structure of MgII absorption in the circumgalactic medium of a galaxy at z=0.77, revealing anisotropic, dispersion-supported gas with weak outflows.
Contribution
First application of extended background sources to spatially resolve CGM kinematics at this redshift, providing new insights into gas recycling mechanisms.
Findings
MgII absorption decreases with impact parameter
Low line-of-sight velocities compared to velocity dispersion
Evidence of dispersion-supported, metal-enriched gas recycling
Abstract
Galaxy evolution is thought to be driven in large part by the flow of gas between galaxies and the circumgalactic medium (CGM), a halo of metal-enriched gas extending out to kpc from each galaxy. Studying the spatial structure of the CGM holds promise for understanding these gas flow mechanisms; however, the common method using background quasar sightlines provides minimal spatial information. Recent works have shown the utility of extended background sources such as giant gravitationally lensed arcs. Using background lensed arcs from the CSWA 38 lens system, we continuously probed, at a resolution element of about 15 kpc, the spatial and kinematic distribution of MgII absorption in a star-forming galaxy at (stellar mass M, star formation rate M yr) at impact parameters kpc. Our results…
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