Misty, patchy, and turbulent: constraining the cool circumgalactic medium with mCC

Abstract

The circumgalactic medium (CGM) is the largest baryon reservoir around galaxies, but its extent, mass, and temperature distribution remain uncertain. We propose that cool gas ( 104 K) in the CGM resides in clumpy structures referred to as cloud complexes (CCs) rather than uniformly filling the entire CGM volume. Each CC contains a mist of tiny cool cloudlets dispersed in a warm/hot medium ( 105 - 106~K). Modeling CCs in the mist limit (unit area covering fraction within a CC) simplifies the calculation of observables like ion absorption columns, equivalent widths, compared to modeling individual cloudlets from first principles. Through Monte Carlo realizations of CCs, we explore how CC properties affect the observed variation in observables. We find that a power-law distribution of CCs (dN CC/dR R-1) with a total of 103 CCs each with a radius of 10 kpc and total cool gas mass of 1010 M reproduces MgII column density and equivalent width distribution trends with impact parameter for the COS-Halos sample (Werk+ 2013). We further show that the area-averaged MgII column density, combined with the area covering fraction, provides a robust proxy for estimating the cool CGM mass, independent of other model parameters. Modeling a larger number of (smaller size) cloudlets within a CC shows that line blending from individual cloudlets results in turbulent broadening on the CC scale. This work presents a practical framework for linking CGM models with observations of a multiphase CGM, illuminating the distribution of cool gas in galaxy halos.

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