A measurement of circumgalactic gas around nearby galaxies using fast radio bursts
Xiaohan Wu, Matthew McQuinn

TL;DR
This study uses fast radio burst dispersion measures to detect and analyze the distribution of circumgalactic gas around nearby galaxies, providing new constraints on halo gas profiles.
Contribution
It presents the first measurement of CGM gas around $10^{11}-10^{13}\,M_ ext{sun}$ halos using FRB data, employing a novel stacking method to detect DM excess.
Findings
Detected marginal DM excess in halos of $10^{11}-10^{12}\,M_ ext{sun}$ and $10^{12}-10^{13}\,M_ ext{sun}$.
Observed DM excess extending up to 2 virial radii in some halos.
Models of CGM gas profiles are consistent with data within 2-$\sigma$.
Abstract
The distribution of gas in the circumgalactic medium (CGM) of galaxies of all types is poorly constrained. Foreground CGMs contribute an extra amount to the dispersion measure (DM) of fast radio bursts (FRB). We measure this DM excess for the CGMs of halos using the CHIME/FRB first data release, a halo mass range that is challenging to probe in any other way. Because of the uncertainty in the FRBs' angular coordinates, only for nearby galaxies is the localization sufficient to confidently associate them with intersecting any foreground halo. Thus we stack on galaxies within 80 Mpc, optimizing the stacking scheme to approximately minimize the stack's variance and marginalize over uncertainties in FRB locations. The sample has 20-30 FRBs intersecting halos with masses of and also of , and these intersections…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
