A High Signal-to-Noise HST Spectrum Toward J1009+0713: Precise Absorption Measurements in the CGM of Two Galaxies

Abstract

High signal-to-noise spectra toward background quasars are crucial for uncovering weak absorption in the circumgalactic medium (CGM) of intervening galaxies, such as the diagnostic lines of N V that provide insight to the ionization process of warm gas but typically have low equivalent widths. We present a new spectrum from the Hubble Space Telescope with a signal-to-noise ratio of 20-35 toward the quasar SDSS J1009+0713 and analyze absorption systems in the CGM of two L galaxies close to the line of sight. We identify additional absorption in the CGM of these galaxies that was not reported by the previous lower signal-to-noise spectrum, as well as Milky Way absorbers and quasar outflows from J1009+0713. We measure (NNV/NOVI)-1.1 for two CGM absorbers, inconsistent with gas in collisional ionization equilibrium and consistent with a radiatively cooling bulk flow of 50-150 km s-1, which could be produced by galactic winds. These column density ratios are also consistent with those found for other L galaxies and for some gas in the Milky Way's halo. We place upper limits of (NNV/NOVI)<-1.8 to -1.2 for other O VI absorbers in the same halos, which suggests that O VI is produced by different processes in different parts of the CGM, even within the same galactic halo. Together with the kinematically different structure of high- and low-ionization lines, these results indicate there are many components to a single galaxy's gaseous halo. We find the redshift number density of Ly-α forest absorbers and broad Ly-α absorbers are consistent with expectations at this redshift.

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