Revisiting FUSE O VI Emission in Galaxy Halos
Haeun Chung, Carlos J. Vargas, Erika Hamden

TL;DR
This study reports new detections of O VI emission in galaxy halos, revealing filamentary structures of warm-hot gas and emphasizing the need for detailed mapping to understand gas cycling in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
The paper presents the first additional detections of O VI emission in galaxy halos beyond the Milky Way, using archival data and updated analysis methods.
Findings
Detected O VI emission in halos of NGC 4631 and NGC 891.
Identified filamentary structures of O VI emission within galaxy halos.
Highlighted the importance of future UV missions for mapping warm-hot gas.
Abstract
A significant fraction of baryons in galaxies are in the form of diffuse gas of the circumgalactic medium (CGM). One critical component of the multi-phases of CGM, the so-called "coronal" warm-hot phase gas ( K) traced by O VI 1031.93, 1037.62 \r{A} resonance lines, has rarely been detected in emission from galaxy halos other than Milky Way. Here we report four additional detections of O VI emission gas in the halos of nearby edge-on galaxies, NGC 4631 and NGC 891, using archival Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer data and an updated data pipeline. We find the most intense O VI emission to be from fields forming a vertical line near the center of NGC 4631, despite the close proximity to the disk of two other fields. The detected O VI emission surface brightness are about 1.1 to 3.9 ergs s cm…
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