Low- and High-velocity O6 in Milky Way-like Galaxies: the Role of Stellar Feedback
Abstract
Milky Way-type galaxies are surrounded by a warm-hot gaseous halo containing a considerable amount of baryons and metals. The kinematics and spatial distribution of highly-ionized ion species such as O6 can be significantly affected by supernova (SN) explosions and early (pre-SN) stellar feedback (e.g., stellar winds, radiation pressure). Here, we investigate effects of stellar feedback on O6 absorptions in Milky Way-like galaxies by analyzing the suites of high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations under the framework of SMUGGLE, a physically motivated subgrid interstellar medium and stellar feedback model for the moving-mesh code Arepo. We find that the fiducial run with the full suite of stellar feedback and moderate star formation activities can reasonably reproduce Galactic O6 absorptions observed by space telescopes such as FUSE, including the scale height of low-velocity (|v LSR|< 100\, km~s-1) O6, the column density - line width relation for high-velocity (100 ≤ |v LSR|< 400\, km~s-1) O6, and the cumulative O6 column densities. In contrast, model variations with more intense star formation activities deviate from observations further. Additionally, we find that the run considering only SN feedback is in broad agreement with the observations, whereas in runs without SN feedback this agreement is absent, which indicates a dominant role of SN feedback in heating and accelerating interstellar O6. This is consistent with the current picture that interstellar O6 is predominantly produced by collisional ionization where mechanical feedback can play a central role. In contrast, photoionization is negligible for O6 production due to the lack of high-energy (114\ eV) photons required.
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