Ardua: Unveiling the Baryon Cycle from Stars to the Cosmic Web

Abstract

The circumgalactic medium (CGM) -- the multiphase gas reservoirs surrounding galaxies -- remains the least understood component of the baryon cycle governing galaxy growth, despite its central role in the Astro2020 Decadal Survey's priorities. Existing constraints come almost exclusively from pencil-beam absorption spectroscopy, leaving the spatial structure, kinematics, and phase interactions of CGM gas fundamentally unmapped. We present Ardua, a mission concept for NASA's ASTRA Initiative that combines wide-field far-ultraviolet spectroscopy with a Line Emission Mapper (LEM)-derived X-ray microcalorimeter instrument to obtain the first comprehensive emission maps spanning the full CGM temperature range, including cool neutral gas, ionized warm-hot phase gas, and the volume-filling hot corona. By observing more than 50 nearby galaxies comprehensively in the UV and X-ray, Ardua will test competing galaxy formation models, resolve multiphase gas flows and feedback-driven outflows, and extend baryon-cycle science to the intergalactic medium and the environments of exoplanet-hosting stars. Beyond its core CGM/IGM program, Ardua's wide-field, high-sensitivity instruments are designed to serve as a flexible community resource, supporting guest-investigator science across astrophysics. No planned or approved mission is designed to deliver this combined UV/X-ray survey capability.

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