Possible evolution of the circum-galactic medium around QSOs with QSO age and cosmic time revealed by Lyα halos
Abstract
We first present new Subaru narrow-band observations of the Lyα halo around the quasi-stellar object (QSO) CFHQ J232908-030158 at z=6.42, which appears the most luminous and extended halo at z>5 (LLyα=9.8×1043 erg s-1 within 37 pkpc diameter). Then, combining these measurements with available data in the literature, we find two different evolutions of QSOs' Lyα halos. First is a possible short-term evolution with QSO age seen in four z>6 QSOs. We find the anti-correlation between the Lyα halo scales with QSOs' IR luminosity, with J2329-0301's halo being the brightest and largest. It indicates that ionizing photons escape more easily out to circum-galactic regions when host galaxies are less dusty. We also find a positive correlation between IR luminosity and black hole mass (MBH). Given MBH as an indicator of QSO age, we propose a hypothesis that a large Lyα halo mainly exists around QSOs in the young phase of their activity due to a small amount of dust. The second is an evolution with cosmic time seen over z2-5. We find the increase of surface brightness toward lower-redshift with a similar growth rate to that of dark matter halos (DHs) which evolve to MDH=1012-1013 M at z=2. The extent of Lyα halos is also found to increase at a rate scaling with the virial radius of growing DHs, rvir MDH1/3(1+z)-1. These increases are consistent with a scenario that the CGM around QSOs evolves in mass and size keeping pace with hosting DHs.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.