Role of Cosmic Rays in the Circumgalactic Medium
Abstract: We explore the impact of cosmic rays (CRs) on cosmological adaptive-mesh refinement simulations of a forming 1012 Msolar halo, focusing on the circumgalactic medium (CGM), and its resulting low-redshift structure and composition. In contrast to a run with star formation and energetic feedback but no CRs, the CR-inclusive runs feature a CGM substantially enriched with CRs and with metals to roughly 0.1 Zsolar, thanks to robust, persistent outflows from the disk. The CR-inclusive CGMs also feature more diffuse gas at lower temperatures, down to 104 K, than the non-CR run, with diffuse material often receiving a majority of its pressure support from the CR proton fluid. We compare to recent observations of the CGM of L ~ L* galaxies at low redshift, including UV absorption lines within background quasar spectra. The combination of metal-enriched, CR-driven winds and large swaths of CR pressure-supported, cooler diffuse gas leads to a CGM that provides a better match to data from COS-Halos (for HI, SiIV, CIII and OVI) than the non-CR run. We also compare our models to recent, preliminary observations of diffuse gamma-ray emission in local group halos. For our lower CR-diffusion runs with kappa_CR in the range 0.3 to 1 x 1028 cm2/s, the CR enriched CGM produces an inconsistently high level of gamma emission. But the model with a relatively high kappa_CR = 3 x 1028 cm2/s provided a gamma-ray luminosity consistent with the extra-galactic gamma-ray background observed by FERMI and roughly consistent with preliminary measures of the emission from M31's CGM.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.