MAGIICAT I. The MgII Absorber–Galaxy Catalog
The catalog is a compilation of the MgII absorber–galaxy pairs
in the literature with spectroscopic galaxy redshifts. In Paper I, we
describe the surveys included, the methods for standardizing
absorption and galaxy properties, and tabulate the data. Only isolated
galaxies are included in Paper I. See Paper VI below for group
environments.
(Left) The relative locations of each galaxy (points) and the
associated background quasar (plus sign) for a majority of the survey
data included in MAGIICAT.
MAGIICAT II. General Characteristics of the MgII Circumgalactic Medium
With the isolated galaxy sample, we investigated the dependence of
MgII absorption characteristics on host galaxy properties. This work
focused on equivalent widths, covering fractions, and
luminosity-scaled absorption radii for various galaxy luminosities,
colors, impact parameters, and redshifts. The MgII circumgalactic
medium is more extended and has a larger covering fraction around
higher luminosity, bluer, and higher redshift galaxies.
(Right) MgII equivalent width is anti-correlated with
quasar–galaxy impact parameter at the 7.9σ level and the
dependence is fit well by a log-linear relation.
The Self-Similarity of the Circumgalactic Medium with Galaxy Virial Mass: Implications for Cold-Mode Accretion
Using halo abundance matching, we obtained galaxy virial masses
and radii for MAGIICAT isolated galaxies and studied the
mass-dependence of equivalent widths and covering fractions. The
circumgalactic medium is self-similar with halo mass. Constant
covering fractions with mass indicate that outflows or sub-halos
contribute to absorption in more massive galaxies despite the
prediction that cold mode accretion is quenched.
(Left) More massive galaxies have larger equivalent
widths at a given impact parameter than less massive
galaxies. This mass segregation vanishes when normalizing impact
parameter by the virial radius.
MAGIICAT III. Interpreting Self-Similarity of the Circumgalactic Medium with Virial Mass using MgII Absorption
Following up on the self-similarity of the CGM with mass, we found
that MgII primarily resides within 0.3 Rvir regardless
of halo mass and for all equivalent width measurements. We also
investigated the dependence of MgII on the cooling radius, finding
that the cooling radius is a poor indicator of MgII absorption
strength. The presence of absorption outside this radius suggests
that cool/warm CGM gas does not solely originate from
fragmentation and condensation out of the hot CGM. Our halo
abundance matching methods are detailed in Appendix A.
(Right) The MgII equivalent width is constant with mass,
contrary to previous absorber–galaxy cross-correlation
studies.
MAGIICAT IV. Kinematics of the Circumgalactic Medium and Evidence for
Quiescent Evolution around Red Galaxies
A subset of about 40 MAGIICAT absorbers (and an additional 30
non-absorbers) have high-resolution spectral coverage with
HIRES/Keck and/or UVES/VLT. With this sample, we studied the
absorber kinematics and column densities as a function of galaxy
redshift and impact parameter.
(Left) The kinematics and column densities for absorbers
associated with blue galaxies do not evolve with redshift,
indicating an active baryon cycle to replenish the CGM with cool
gas. For red galaxies, the velocity dispersions decrease and
column densities increase with redshift. The CGM of red galaxies
appears to be impacted by star formation quenching.
Tracing Outflows and Accretion: A Bimodal Azimuthal Dependence of MgII Absorption
Galaxy morphological properties were modeled from HST or
SDSS images for 88 absorbing and 35 non-absorbing galaxies. We
investigated the dependence of MgII covering fractions on the
azimuthal angle: the angle between the projected galaxy major axis
and the quasar sightline. MgII absorption is more likely found
within 20° of the major axis and within 50° of the minor
axis.
(Right) The azimuthal angle dependence of MgII is most
strongly seen in blue star-forming galaxies, whereas the
distribution is flat for red passive galaxies.
MAGIICAT V. Orientation of Outflows and Accretion Determine the Kinematics and
Column Densities of the Circumgalactic Medium
Baryon cycle processes are expected to exhibit differing kinematic
and column density properties depending on the orientation of the
host galaxy. We investigated these differences for a sample of 30
galaxies with MgII in high-resolution quasar spectra and modeled
galaxy morphologies (inclinations and azimuthal angles)
from HST images.
Gas entrained in biconical outflows along the minor axis
of star-forming galaxies appears to be fragmented with large
velocity dispersions. Accreting/rotating gas along galaxy major
axes has smaller velocity dispersions and may be more
coherent. Quiescent galaxies appear to exhibit little-to-no
outflows along their minor axes, but may host rotating gas along
their major axes.
(Left) Absorbers hosted by blue, face-on galaxies have
the largest velocity dispersions, indicative of outflows, whereas
red, face-on galaxies have the smallest velocity dispersions,
suggesting a lack of outflowing gas. For absorbers hosted by
edge-on galaxies, there are no significant differences in their
kinematics regardless of the host galaxy star formation
activity.
MAGIICAT VI. The MgII Intragroup Medium is Kinematically Complex
Working with a sample of 29 group environments (2–5 galaxies
within 200 kpc of the quasar sightline and within a line-of-sight
velocity separation of 500 km s-1), we examined the
MgII intragroup medium. A superposition of multiple galaxy CGM
predicts much of the observed equivalent width, but greatly
overpredicts the kinematics. MgII is likely deposited into an
intragroup medium via outflowing winds and/or from tidal stripping
of interacting member galaxies.
(Right, top) Group environments, with connected
triangles, have larger median equivalent widths and covering
fractions than isolated galaxies, gray points and downward
arrows.
(Right, bottom) Comparing average absorption profiles,
group absorbers display more optical depth at larger velocities
(roughly 100 km s-1) than isolated absorbers.