The nature of diffuse ionised gas in star-forming galaxies
Abstract
We present an analysis of the diffuse ionised gas (DIG) in a high-resolution simulation of an isolated Milky Way-like galaxy, incorporating on-the-fly radiative transfer and non-equilibrium thermochemistry. We utilise the Monte-Carlo radiative transfer code COLT to self-consistently obtain ionisation states and line emission in post-processing. We find a clear bimodal distribution in the electron densities of ionised gas (n e), allowing us to define a threshold of n e=10\,cm-3 to differentiate DIG from HII regions. The DIG is primarily ionised by stars aged 5-25 Myr, which become exposed directly to low-density gas after HII regions have been cleared. Leakage from recently formed stars (<5 Myr) is only moderately important for DIG ionisation. We forward model local observations and validate our simulated DIG against observed line ratios in [SII]/Hα, [NII]/Hα, [OI]/Hα, and [OIII]/Hβ against Hα. The mock observations not only reproduce observed correlations, but also demonstrate that such trends are related to an increasing temperature and hardening ionising radiation field with decreasing n e. The hardening of radiation within the DIG is caused by the gradual transition of the dominant ionising source with decreasing n e from 0 Myr to 25 Myr stars, which have progressively harder intrinsic ionising spectra primarily due to the extended Wolf-Rayet phase caused by binary interactions. Consequently, the DIG line ratio trends can be attributed to ongoing star formation, rather than secondary ionisation sources, and therefore present a potent test for stellar feedback and stellar population models.
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