Properties of the circumgalactic medium in cosmic ray-dominated galaxy haloes
Abstract
We investigate the impact of cosmic rays (CRs) on the circumgalactic medium (CGM) in FIRE-2 simulations, for ultra-faint dwarf through Milky Way (MW)-mass haloes hosting star-forming (SF) galaxies. Our CR treatment includes injection by supernovae, anisotropic streaming and diffusion along magnetic field lines, and collisional and streaming losses, with constant parallel diffusivity κ∼3×10²⁹ cm² s⁻¹ chosen to match γ-ray observations. With this, CRs become more important at larger halo masses and lower redshifts, and dominate the pressure in the CGM in MW-mass haloes at z ≲ 1–2. The gas in these 'CR-dominated' haloes differs significantly from runs without CRs: the gas is primarily cool (a few ∼10⁴), and the cool phase is volume-filling and has a thermal pressure below that needed for virial or local thermal pressure balance. Ionization of the 'low' and 'mid' ions in this diffuse cool gas is dominated by photoionization, with O VI columns ≳10^(14.5) cm⁻² at distances ≳150kpc. CR and thermal gas pressure are locally anticorrelated, maintaining total pressure balance, and the CGM gas density profile is determined by the balance of CR pressure gradients and gravity. Neglecting CRs, the same haloes are primarily warm/hot (T≳10⁵) with thermal pressure balancing gravity, collisional ionization dominates, O VI columns are lower and Ne VIII higher, and the cool phase is confined to dense filaments in local thermal pressure equilibrium with the hot phase.
Additional Information
© 2020 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model (https://academic.oup.com/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model). Accepted 2020 June 22. Received 2020 June 18; in original form 2019 August 31. Published: 26 June 2020. We thank the anonymous referee for a constructive and insightful report which improved our paper. SJ is supported by a Sherman Fairchild Fellowship from Caltech. SJ thanks Joe Burchett, Zheng Cai, Taotao Fang, Peng Oh, J. Xavier Prochaska, Gwen Rudie, Mateusz Ruszkowski, Britton Smith, Daniel Wang, and Jessica Werk for many helpful comments and discussions, and the Aspen Center for Physics supported by NSF PHY-1607611 for its hospitality where part of this work was completed. Support for PFH and co-authors was provided by an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, NSF Collaborative Research grant #1715847 and CAREER grant#1455342, and NASA grants NNX15AT06G, JPL 1589742, and 17-ATP17-0214. DK was supported by NSF grant AST-1715101 and the Cottrell Scholar Award from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement. CAFG was supported by NSF through grants AST-1517491, AST-1715216, and CAREER award AST-1652522, by NASA through grant 17-ATP17-0067, by STScI through grants HST-GO-14681.011, HST-GO-14268.022-A, and HST-AR-14293.001-A, and by a Cottrell Scholar Award from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement. Numerical calculations were run on the Caltech compute cluster 'Wheeler'; allocations from XSEDE TG-AST120025, TG-AST130039, and PRAC NSF.1713353 were supported by the NSF and NASA HEC SMD-16-7592. We have made use of NASA's Astrophysics Data System. Data analysis and visualization are made with PYTHON 3, and its packages including NUMPY (Van Der Walt, Colbert & Varoquaux 2011), SCIPY (Oliphant 2007), MATPLOTLIB (Hunter 2007), HEALPY (Górski et al. 2005; Zonca et al. 2019), the YT astrophysics analysis software suite (Turk et al. 2010), and the absorption spectra tool TRIDENT (Hummels et al. 2017), as well as the spectral simulation code CLOUDY (Ferland et al. 2017). Data Availability: The data supporting the plots within this article are available on reasonable request to the corresponding author. A public version of the GIZMO code is available at http://www.tapir.caltech.edu/~phopkins/Site/GIZMO.html. Additional data including simulation snapshots, initial conditions, and derived data products are available at http://fire.northwestern.edu.Attached Files
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Additional details
- Alternative title
- Properties of the Circumgalactic Medium in Cosmic Ray-Dominated Galaxy Halos
- Eprint ID
- 101837
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20200310-145036739
- Sherman Fairchild Foundation
- NSF
- PHY-1607611
- Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
- NSF
- AST-1715847
- NSF
- AST-1455342
- NASA
- NNX15AT06G
- JPL
- 1589742
- JPL
- 17-ATP17-0214
- NSF
- AST-1715101
- Cottrell Scholar of Research Corporation
- NSF
- AST-1517491
- NSF
- AST-1715216
- NSF
- AST-1652522
- NASA
- 17-ATP17-0067
- NASA
- HST-GO-14681.011
- NASA
- HST-GO-14268.022-A
- NASA
- HST-AR-14293.001-A
- NSF
- TG-AST120025
- NSF
- TG-AST130039
- NSF
- OAC-1713353
- NASA
- SMD-16-7592
- Created
-
2020-03-10Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Astronomy Department, TAPIR