Connecting cosmological accretion to strong Lyman-alpha absorbers
Tom Theuns (ICC, Durham)

TL;DR
This paper introduces an analytical model linking gas accretion onto dark matter halos with observed Lyman-alpha absorbers, explaining their distribution, evolution, and properties through simplified radiative transfer and cosmological principles.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel analytical framework that connects cosmological gas accretion to Lyman-alpha absorbers, matching observations and elucidating their properties and evolution.
Findings
The model accurately reproduces the observed column-density distribution function.
It explains the weak redshift evolution of the CDDF from z=2 to 5.
The predicted neutral gas density aligns with observations.
Abstract
We present an analytical model for the cosmological accretion of gas onto dark matter halos, based on a similarity solution applicable to spherical systems. Performing simplified radiative transfer, we compute how the accreting gas turns increasingly neutral as it self-shields from the ionising background, and obtain the column density, , as a function of impact parameter. The resulting column-density distribution function (CDDF) is in excellent agreement with observations. The analytical expression elucidates (1) why halos over a large range in mass contribute about equally to the CDDF as well as (2) why the CDDF evolves so little with redshift in the range . We show that the model also predicts reasonable DLA line-widths (), bias and molecular fractions. Integrating over the CDDF yields the mass density in neutral gas, , which…
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