SIMBAD references

2009ApJ...695.1631R - Astrophys. J., 695, 1631-1647 (2009/April-3)

A population of weak metal-line absorbers surrounding the Milky Way.

RICHTER P., CHARLTON J.C., FANGANO A.P.M., BEKHTI N.B. and MASIERO J.R.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report on the detection of a population of weak metal-line absorbers in the halo or nearby intergalactic environment of the Milky Way. Using high-resolution ultraviolet absorption-line spectra of bright quasars (QSO) obtained with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS), along six sight lines we have observed unsaturated, narrow absorption in O I and Si II, together with mildly saturated C II absorption at high radial velocities (|vLSR| = 100-320 km/s). The measured O I column densities lie in the range N(O I) < 2 x1014/cm2 implying that these structures represent Lyman limit Systems and sub-Lyman limit System with H I column densities between 1016 and 3 x1018/cm2, thus below the detection limits of current 21 cm all-sky surveys of high-velocity clouds (HVCs). The absorbers apparently are not directly associated with any of the large high column density HVC complexes, but rather represent isolated, partly neutral gas clumps embedded in a more tenuous, ionized gaseous medium situated in the halo or nearby intergalactic environment of the Galaxy. Photoionization modeling of the observed low ion ratios suggests typical hydrogen volume densities of nH> 0.02/cm3 and characteristic thicknesses of a several parsec down to subparsec scales. For three absorbers, metallicities are constrained in the range of 0.1-1.0 solar, implying that these gaseous structures may have multiple origins inside and outside the Milky Way. Using supplementary optical absorption-line data, we find for two other absorbers Ca II/O I column-density ratios that correspond to solar Ca/O abundance ratios. This finding indicates that these clouds do not contain significant amounts of dust. This population of low column density gas clumps in the circumgalactic environment of the Milky Way is indicative of the various processes that contribute to the circulation of neutral gas in the extended halos of spiral galaxies. These processes include the accretion of gas from the intergalactic medium and satellite galaxies, galactic fountains, and outflows. We speculate that this absorber population represents the local analog of weak Mg II systems that are commonly observed in the circumgalactic environment of low- and high-redshift galaxies.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Galaxy: halo - ISM: clouds - quasars: absorption lines

Simbad objects: 37

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