The hot circumgalactic medium of the Milky Way: evidence for super-virial, virial, and sub-virial temperature, non-solar chemical composition, and non-thermal line broadening
Sanskriti Das, Smita Mathur, Anjali Gupta, Yair Krongold

TL;DR
This study detects and characterizes three distinct temperature phases in the Milky Way's circumgalactic medium using high-quality Chandra spectra, revealing complex thermal, chemical, and non-thermal properties that inform galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First simultaneous detection of three temperature phases in the Milky Way CGM at >10^5 K, with detailed chemical composition and non-thermal broadening analysis.
Findings
Identification of super-virial, virial, and sub-virial temperature phases.
Super-solar and alpha-enhanced chemical abundances in the CGM.
Non-thermal line broadening dominates the observed spectral lines.
Abstract
For the first time, we present the simultaneous detection and characterization of three distinct phases at K in absorption, using deep observations toward Mrk 421. The extraordinarily high signal-to-noise ratio () of the spectra has allowed us to detect a phase of the Milky Way circumgalactic medium (CGM) at 3.2 10 K, coexisting with a phase at 1.50.110 K and a phase at 3.00.410 K. The phase is at the virial temperature of the Galaxy, and the phase may have cooled from the phase, but the super-virial phase remains a mystery. We find that [C/O] in the and phases, [Mg/O] in the phase and [Ne/O] in the …
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
