The circumgalactic medium traced by Mg II absorption with DESI: dependence on galaxy stellar mass, star formation rate and azimuthal angle
Abstract
Understanding the circumgalactic medium (CGM) distribution of galaxies is the key to revealing the dynamical exchange of materials between galaxies and their surroundings. In this work, we use DESI EDR dataset to investigate the cool CGM of galaxies (0.3<z<1.7) with stacking the spectra of background QSOs to obtain Mg II absorption of foreground galaxies. The equivalent width of Mg II absorption strongly correlates to stellar mass with EW(Mg II) M*0.5 for star-forming galaxies with M*/M < 10, but is independent with mass for galaxies above this mass. At given stellar mass, EW(Mg II) is larger for galaxies of higher star formation rate with impact parameter less than 50 kpc, while showing little dependence on galaxy size. By studying the dependence on azimuthal angle, we find EW(Mg II) is strongest at the direction near the minor axis for star-forming galaxies with M*/M < 10.0, while no dependence on azimuthal angle is seen for luminous red galaxies. This indicates that the outflow associated with star formation enhances the Mg II absorption. However, for galaxies with M*/M > 10.0, the EW(Mg II) at the minor axis is largely suppressed with respect to low mass galaxies. This suggests that the competing processes, such as stellar feedback and gravity, play a key role in shaping the distribution of outflowing gas.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.