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Nearby galaxy filaments and the Lya forest: confronting simulations and the UV background with observations

Published 10 Apr 2015 in astro-ph.CO and astro-ph.GA | (1504.02539v3)

Abstract: Simulations of the formation of large-scale structure predict that dark matter, low density highly ionized gas, and galaxies form 10 40 Mpc scale filaments. These structure are easily recognized in the distribution of galaxies, but have not been directly observed in the distribution of the gas. We use Ly-alpha absorption lines in the spectra of 24 AGN to present a new way to probe these filaments. We use a new catalogue of nearby (cz<10,000 km/s) galaxies, complete down to a luminosity of about 0.05 L* for the region of space analyzed here. Using HST spectra of 24 AGN we sample the gas associated with a 30x5 Mpc galaxy filament at cz~3500 km/s. All of our sightlines pass outside the virial radius of any known filament galaxy. Within 500 kpc of the filament axis the detection rate is ~80%, while no detections are seen more than 2.1 Mpc from the filament. The width of the Lya lines correlates with filament impact parameter and the four BLAs in our sample all occur within 400 kpc of the filament axis, indicating increased temperature and/or turbulence. Comparing to simulations, we find that the recent Haardt & Madau (2012) extragalactic ionizing background predicts a factor 3-5 too few ionizing photons. Using a more intense radiation field matches the hydrogen density profile within 2.1 Mpc of the filament axis, but the simulations still overpredict the detection rate between 2.1 and 5 Mpc from the axis.

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