Disturbed cold gas in galaxy and structure formation
Siwei Zou, Robert A. Simcoe, Patrick Petitjean, Celine Peroux, Jaclyn B. Champagne, Feige Wang, Jinning Liang, Fangzhou Jiang, Zihao Li, Wen Sun, Xiaohui Fan, Jinyi Yang, Luis C. Ho, Xiaojing Lin, Jianan Li, Jianwei Lyu, Lile Wang, Weizhe Liu, Emanuele Paolo Farina, Xiangyu Jin

TL;DR
This study investigates disturbed cold gas structures in the circumgalactic medium at high redshifts, revealing their complex interactions, metallicity exchange, and potential role in galaxy disk formation through multi-wavelength observations.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of disturbed cold gas structures at z~2.6 and z~4.9, highlighting their kinematics, metallicity, and dust exchange, advancing understanding of galaxy formation processes.
Findings
Detection of two Lya emitters associated with MgII absorbers at z~4.87.
Identification of a dusty star-forming galaxy at 38 kpc with high SFR at z=2.5652.
Evidence of internal metal and dust exchange within cold gas structures.
Abstract
Cold and cool gas (T K) in the circumgalactic medium (CGM) and its interaction with galaxies remain poorly understood. Simulations predict that cold gas flows into galaxies through cosmic filaments, determining the disk formation and galaxy evolution. The cold gas accretion modes in the CGM and their dependence on dark matter halo mass and redshift remain puzzling. Resolving the kiloparsec-scale kinematics and dynamics of cold gas interacting with the disk, dust, and metals in different environments is particularly lacking at z > 2. Here we report two disturbed cold gas structures traced by ultra-strong MgII absorbers (rest-frame equivalent width Wr > 2 \AA) exhibiting high kinematic velocities (> 500 km/s) and their environments at z ~ 4.9 and z ~ 2.6. Observations were conducted with VLT/MUSE, JWST/NIRCam, and ALMA to detect Lya and nebular emission lines, as well as dust…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
