Kinematics of H I and O VI Absorbers: Insights into the Turbulence Driver of the Multiphase Circumgalactic Medium

Abstract

We investigate large-scale gas kinematics in the multiphase circumgalactic medium (CGM) using the observed correlation between line width (Doppler b parameter) and column density (N) for H I and O VI absorbers. Leveraging extensive public galaxy survey data at z0.1, we construct a new galaxy sample based on the availability of background Quasi-Stellar Objects (QSOs) with far-ultraviolet spectra from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE). By combining this FUSE-galaxy sample with literature collections, we find that H I absorbers exhibit a clear inverse correlation between Doppler width and column density over nearly five orders of magnitude in N HI, from N HI ≈ 1013\,cm-2 to N HI ≈ 1018\,cm-2, while O VI absorption follows a positive correlation across N OVI≈ 3×1013-1015\,cm-2.We develop a model framework to interpret these contrasting trends and show that H I absorbers are best described as systems of approximately constant total column density (N H), whereas O VI traces regions of roughly constant spatial density (n H and n OVI). Under the latter scenario, the observed b OVI-N OVI relation maps directly to a velocity-size relation consistent with a Kolmogorov-like turbulent spectrum. Together, these findings reveal a coherent physical picture in which H I and O VI trace a continuous turbulent cascade spanning more than five orders of magnitude in spatial scale-from cool, photoionized clumps to warm, highly ionized halo gas -- with accretion in the halo outskirts likely driving the turbulent energy injection that sustains the multiphase CGM.

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