Project AMIGA: The Inner Circumgalactic Medium of Andromeda from Thick Disk to Halo
Nicolas Lehner, J. Christopher Howk, Lucy Collins, Sameer, Bart P. Wakker, Ramona Augustin, Kathleen A. Barger, Michelle A. Berg, Rongmon Bordoloi, Thomas M. Brown, Frances H. Cashman, Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere, Andrew J. Fox, David M. French, Karoline M. Gilbert

TL;DR
This study maps and analyzes the inner circumgalactic medium of Andromeda (M31), revealing its structure, composition, and the processes shaping it, with implications for galaxy evolution and comparison to other galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of M31's inner CGM within 75 kpc, including ion distributions, gas phases, and metal content, using extensive QSO sightlines.
Findings
Detected a transition between thick disk and CGM at 30 kpc.
Inner CGM shows complex, multi-phase gas with no azimuthal dependence.
Estimated total metal mass in M31's cool CGM is approximately 1.9x10^7 solar masses.
Abstract
The inner circumgalactic medium (CGM) of galaxies, where disk and halo processes intersect, remains poorly characterized despite its critical role in regulating galaxy evolution. We present results from Project AMIGA Insider, mapping Andromeda's (M31) inner CGM within 0.25 R_vir (~75 kpc) using 11 QSO sightlines, bringing our total sample to 54 sightlines from the disk to 2 R_vir. We detect a clear transition between M31's thick disk and CGM at R < 30 kpc, where low/intermediate ions show thick-disk corotating components with higher column densities than the CGM ones, while high ions exhibit similar column densities in both the CGM and thick disk. Beyond this region, all ion column densities decrease with impact parameter, with steeper gradients for low ions than high ions. The inner CGM (R < 100 kpc) shows more complex gas phases and multi-component absorption compared to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
