On The Origin Of Metallicity In Lyman-Alpha Forest Systems
Abstract
We investigate the hypothesis that absorption lines arise in two populations of halos --- minihalos of small circular velocity (Vc 55 km s-1) in which star formation and metal production are inhibited by photoionization of the UV background radiation, and large galactic halos (55 Vc 250 km s-1) which possess stars and metals. Based on the model of -absorbing gas confined in both populations of halos, we attempt to explain the recent observations of (1) associations of visible galaxies with lines at low redshifts z 1, and (2) metal lines associated with a non-negligible fraction of low H I column density lines at z 3. For galactic halos, we find that photoionized gas clouds confined in the pressure of ambient hot gas can produce absorptions with H I column density as low as 1014 cm-2, and that the impact parameter of a sightline for such absorptions matches well with the observed radius of gaseous envelope in a typical luminous galaxy. Using the Press- Schechter prescription for the mass function of halos, we also show that the fraction of lines with associated metal lines can be understood in terms of the fraction of absorbers that are associated with galactic halos. In particular, the reported fraction of 0.5--0.75 at z 3 is reproduced when the boundary value of Vc to separate mini or galactic halos is 40 60 km s-1, which is consistent with the theoretical prediction of galaxy formation under photoionization. .....
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