Investigating the physics and environment of lyman limit systems in cosmological simulations

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Abstract

In this work, I investigate the properties of Lyman limit systems (LLSs) using state-of-the-art zoom-in cosmological galaxy formation simulations with on the fly radiative transfer, which includes both the cosmic UV background (UVB) and local stellar sources. I compare the simulation results to observations of the incidence frequency of LLSs and the H i column density distribution function over the redshift range z = 2-5 and find good agreement. I explore the connection between LLSs and their host haloes and find that LLSs reside in haloes with a wide range of halo masses with a nearly constant covering fraction within a virial radius. Over the range z = 2-5, I find that more than half of the LLSs reside in haloes with M < 1010h-1M⊙, indicating that absorption line studies of LLSs can probe these low-mass galaxies which H2-based star formation models predict to have very little star formation. I study the physical state of individual LLSs and test a simple model which encapsulates many of their properties. I confirm that LLSs have a characteristic absorption length given by the Jeans length and that they are in photoionization equilibrium at low column densities. Finally, I investigate the self-shielding of LLSs to the UVB and explore how the non-sphericity of LLSs affects the photoionization rate at a given NH I. I find that at z ≈ 3, LLSs have an optical depth of unity at a column density of ~1018cm-2 and that this is the column density which characterizes the onset of self-shielding.

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Erkal, D. (2015). Investigating the physics and environment of lyman limit systems in cosmological simulations. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 451(1), 904–916. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv980

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