Thursday, November 29, 2012

1211.6131 (J. Xavier Prochaska et al.)

A Substantial Mass of Cool, Metal-Enriched Gas Surrounding the Progenitors of Modern-Day Ellipticals    [PDF]

J. Xavier Prochaska, Joseph F. Hennawi, Robert A. Simcoe
The hosts of luminous z~2 quasars evolve into today's massive elliptical galaxies. Current theories predict that the circum-galactic medium (CGM) of these massive, dark-matter halos (M~10^12.5 Msun) should be dominated by a T~10^7 K virialized plasma. We test this hypothesis with observations of 74 close-projected quasar pairs, using spectra of the background QSO to characterize the CGM of the foreground one. Surprisingly, our measurements reveal a cool (T~10^4 K), massive (M_CGM > 10^10 Msun), and metal-enriched (Z > ~0.1 Zsun) medium extending to at least the expected virial radius (r_vir = 160 kpc). The average equivalent widths of HI Lya ( = 2.1 pm 0.15Ang for impact parameters R<200 kpc) and CII 1334 ( = 0.7 pm 0.1Ang) exceed the corresponding CGM measurements of these transitions from all galaxy populations studied previously. Furthermore, we conservatively estimate that the quasar CGM has a 64% covering fraction of optically thick gas (N_HI>10^17.2) within r_vir; this covering factor is twice that of the contemporaneous Lyman Break Galaxy population. This unexpected reservoir of cool gas is rarely detected "down-the-barrel" to quasars, and hence it is likely that our background sightlines intercept gas which is shadowed from the quasar ionizing radiation by the same obscuring medium often invoked in models of AGN unification. Because the high-z halos inhabited by quasars predate modern groups and clusters, these observations are also relevant to the formation and enrichment history of the intragroup/intracluster medium.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1211.6131

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