The Cosmic Ultraviolet Baryon Survey: Empirical Characterization of Turbulence in the Cool Circumgalactic Medium

Abstract

This paper reports the first measurement of the relationship between turbulent velocity and cloud size in the diffuse circumgalactic medium (CGM) in typical galaxy halos at redshift z~0.4-1. Through spectrally-resolved absorption profiles of a suite of ionic transitions paired with careful ionization analyses of individual components, cool clumps of size as small as lcl~1 pc and density lower than nH = 0.001 cm-3 are identified in galaxy halos. In addition, comparing the line widths between different elements for kinematically matched components provides robust empirical constraints on the thermal temperature T and the non-thermal motions bNT, independent of the ionization models. On average, bNT is found to increase with lcl following bNT lcl0.3 over three decades in spatial scale from lcl~1 pc to lcl~1 kpc. Attributing the observed bNT to turbulent motions internal to the clumps, the best-fit bNT-lcl relation shows that the turbulence is consistent with Kolmogorov at <1 kpc with a roughly constant energy transfer rate per unit mass of epsilon~0.003 cm2 s-3 and a dissipation time scale of <~ 100 Myr. No significant difference is found between massive quiescent and star-forming halos in the sample on scales less than 1 kpc. While the inferred epsilon is comparable to what is found in CIV absorbers at high redshift, it is considerably smaller than observed in star-forming gas or in extended line-emitting nebulae around distant quasars. A brief discussion of possible sources to drive the observed turbulence in the cool CGM is presented.

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