How identifying circumgalactic gas by line-of-sight velocity instead of the location in 3D space affects O VI measurements

Abstract

The high incidence rate of the O VI λλ1032,1038 absorption around low-redshift, * star-forming galaxies has generated interest in studies of the circumgalactic medium. We use the high-resolution EAGLE cosmological simulation to analyze the circumgalactic O VI gas around z≈0.3 star-forming galaxies. Motivated by the limitation that observations do not reveal where the gas lies along the line-of-sight, we compare the O VI measurements produced by gas within fixed distances around galaxies and by gas selected using line-of-sight velocity cuts commonly adopted by observers. We show that gas selected by a velocity cut of 300 km s-1 or 500 km s-1 produces a higher O VI column density, a flatter column density profile, and a higher covering fraction compared to gas within one, two, or three times the virial radius (rvir) of galaxies. The discrepancy increases with impact parameter and worsens for lower mass galaxies. For example, compared to the gas within 2rvir, identifying the gas using velocity cuts of 200-500 km s-1 increases the O VI column density by 0.2 dex (0.1 dex) at 1rvir to over 0.75 dex (0.7 dex) at ≈2rvir for galaxies with stellar masses of 109-109.5 M (1010-1010.5 M). We furthermore estimate that excluding O VI outside rvir decreases the circumgalactic oxygen mass measured by Tumlinson et al. (2011) by over 50%. Our results demonstrate that gas at large line-of-sight separations but selected by conventional velocity windows has significant effects on the O VI measurements and may not be observationally distinguishable from gas near the galaxies.

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