The physical origins of gas in the circumgalactic medium using observationally-motivated TNG50 mocks
Abstract
Absorbers in the spectrum of background objects probe the circumgalactic medium (CGM) surrounding galaxies, but its physical properties remain unconstrained. We use the cosmological hydrodynamical simulation TNG50 to statistically trace the origins of HI Ly-α absorbers around galaxies at z = 0.5 with stellar masses ranging from 108 to 1011 M. We emulate observational CGM studies by considering all gas within a line of sight velocity range of 500 km s-1 from the central, to quantitatively assess the impact of other galaxy haloes and overdense gas in the IGM that intersect sightlines. The impact of satellites to the total absorber fraction is most significant at impact parameters 0.5 R vir < b < R vir and satellites with masses below typical detection limits (M* < 108 M) account for 10 (40) per cent of absorbers that intersect any satellite bound to 1010 and 1011 (109) M centrals. After confirming outflows are more dominant along the minor axis, we additionally show that at least 20 per cent of absorbers exhibit no significant radial movement, indicating that absorbers can also trace quasi-static gas. The metallicity of absorbers also depends on the azimuthal angle, but this signal is largely driven by enriched inflowing and quasi-static gas. Our work shows that determining the stellar mass of galaxies at z abs is essential to constrain the physical origin of the gas traced in absorption, which in turn is key to characterising the kinematics and distribution of gas and metals in the CGM.
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