Observations of quasar pairs reveal that quasar host halos at z~2 have large
covering fractions of cool dense gas (>~60% for Lyman limit systems within a
projected virial radius). Most simulations have so far failed to explain these
large observed covering fractions. We analyze a new set of 15 simulated massive
halos with explicit stellar feedback from the FIRE project, covering the halo
mass range M_h~2x10^12-10^13 Msun at z=2. This extends our previous analysis of
the circum-galactic medium of high-redshift galaxies to more massive halos.
Feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN) is not included in these
simulations. We find covering fractions consistent with those observed around
z~2 quasars. The large HI covering fractions arise from star formation-driven
galactic winds, including winds from low-mass satellite galaxies that interact
with the cosmological infalling filaments in which they are typically embedded.
The simulated covering fractions increase with both halo mass and redshift over
the ranges covered, as well as with resolution. Our simulations predict that
galaxies occupying dark matter halos of mass similar to quasars but without a
luminous AGN should have Lyman limit system covering fractions comparable to
quasars. This prediction can be tested by measuring covering fractions
transverse to sub-millimeter galaxies or to more quiescent galaxies selected
based on their high stellar mass.
Beschreibung
[1601.07188] A Stellar Feedback Origin for Neutral Hydrogen in High-Redshift Quasar-Mass Halos
%0 Generic
%1 fauchergiguere2016stellar
%A Faucher-Giguere, C. A.
%A Feldmann, R.
%A Quataert, E.
%A Keres, D.
%A Hopkins, P. F.
%A Murray, N.
%D 2016
%K HI feedback quasars simulation stellar
%T A Stellar Feedback Origin for Neutral Hydrogen in High-Redshift
Quasar-Mass Halos
%U http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.07188
%X Observations of quasar pairs reveal that quasar host halos at z~2 have large
covering fractions of cool dense gas (>~60% for Lyman limit systems within a
projected virial radius). Most simulations have so far failed to explain these
large observed covering fractions. We analyze a new set of 15 simulated massive
halos with explicit stellar feedback from the FIRE project, covering the halo
mass range M_h~2x10^12-10^13 Msun at z=2. This extends our previous analysis of
the circum-galactic medium of high-redshift galaxies to more massive halos.
Feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN) is not included in these
simulations. We find covering fractions consistent with those observed around
z~2 quasars. The large HI covering fractions arise from star formation-driven
galactic winds, including winds from low-mass satellite galaxies that interact
with the cosmological infalling filaments in which they are typically embedded.
The simulated covering fractions increase with both halo mass and redshift over
the ranges covered, as well as with resolution. Our simulations predict that
galaxies occupying dark matter halos of mass similar to quasars but without a
luminous AGN should have Lyman limit system covering fractions comparable to
quasars. This prediction can be tested by measuring covering fractions
transverse to sub-millimeter galaxies or to more quiescent galaxies selected
based on their high stellar mass.
@misc{fauchergiguere2016stellar,
abstract = {Observations of quasar pairs reveal that quasar host halos at z~2 have large
covering fractions of cool dense gas (>~60% for Lyman limit systems within a
projected virial radius). Most simulations have so far failed to explain these
large observed covering fractions. We analyze a new set of 15 simulated massive
halos with explicit stellar feedback from the FIRE project, covering the halo
mass range M_h~2x10^12-10^13 Msun at z=2. This extends our previous analysis of
the circum-galactic medium of high-redshift galaxies to more massive halos.
Feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN) is not included in these
simulations. We find covering fractions consistent with those observed around
z~2 quasars. The large HI covering fractions arise from star formation-driven
galactic winds, including winds from low-mass satellite galaxies that interact
with the cosmological infalling filaments in which they are typically embedded.
The simulated covering fractions increase with both halo mass and redshift over
the ranges covered, as well as with resolution. Our simulations predict that
galaxies occupying dark matter halos of mass similar to quasars but without a
luminous AGN should have Lyman limit system covering fractions comparable to
quasars. This prediction can be tested by measuring covering fractions
transverse to sub-millimeter galaxies or to more quiescent galaxies selected
based on their high stellar mass.},
added-at = {2016-01-28T12:22:21.000+0100},
author = {Faucher-Giguere, C. A. and Feldmann, R. and Quataert, E. and Keres, D. and Hopkins, P. F. and Murray, N.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/263c5927bfacfdca734baba55880ef6b9/miki},
description = {[1601.07188] A Stellar Feedback Origin for Neutral Hydrogen in High-Redshift Quasar-Mass Halos},
interhash = {2993cb981eb66ea63aa2ce2d0c77fe42},
intrahash = {63c5927bfacfdca734baba55880ef6b9},
keywords = {HI feedback quasars simulation stellar},
note = {cite arxiv:1601.07188Comment: 6 pages, including 3 figures. Submitted},
timestamp = {2016-01-28T12:22:21.000+0100},
title = {A Stellar Feedback Origin for Neutral Hydrogen in High-Redshift
Quasar-Mass Halos},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.07188},
year = 2016
}