HST/COS Observations of the Warm Ionized Gaseous Halo of NGC 891

Abstract

The metallicity of galactic gaseous halos provides insights into accretion and feedback of galaxies. The nearby edge-on galaxy NGC 891 has a multi-component gaseous halo and a background AGN (LQAC 035+042 003) projected 5 kpc above the disk near the minor axis. Against the UV continuum of this AGN, we detect lines from 13 ions associated with NGC 891 in new HST/COS spectra. Most of the absorption is from the warm ionized gas with T=4.220.04, n H=-1.260.51, and N H=20.81 0.20. The metallicity of volatile elements (i.e., C, N, and S) is about half solar ([X/H] ≈ -0.3 0.3), while Mg, Fe, and Ni show lower metallicities of [X/H]≈-0.9. The absorption system shows the depletion pattern seen for warm Galactic diffuse clouds, which is consistent with a mixture of ejected solar metallicity disk gases and the hot X-ray emitting halo (Z=0.1-0.2Z). The warm ionized gases are about 5 times more massive than the cold H1 emitting gases around the galactic center, which might lead to accretion with a mean rate of 102~M~yr-1 for a period of time. We also detect low metallicity (≈ 0.1~Z) gases toward LQAC 035+042 003 at 110~km~s-1 (a high velocity cloud) and toward another sight line (3C 66A; 108 kpc projected from NGC 891) at 30~km~s-1. This low metallicity material could be the cold mode accretion from IGM or the tidal disruption of satellites in the NGC 891 halo.

0

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.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…