Bibcode
Bertone, Serena; Schaye, Joop; Dalla Vecchia, C.; Booth, C. M.; Theuns, Tom; Wiersma, Robert P. C.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 407, Issue 1, pp. 544-566.
Advertised on:
9
2010
Citations
40
Refereed citations
39
Description
Emission lines from metals offer one of the most promising ways to
detect the elusive warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM; 105
< T < 107K), which is thought to contain a substantial
fraction of the baryons in the low-redshift Universe. We present
predictions for the soft X-ray line emission from the WHIM using a
subset of cosmological simulations from the Overwhelmingly Large
Simulations (OWLS) project. We use the OWLS models to test the
dependence of the predicted emission on a range of physical
prescriptions, such as cosmology, gas cooling and feedback from star
formation and accreting black holes. Provided that metal-line cooling is
taken into account, the models give surprisingly similar results,
indicating that the predictions are robust. Soft X-ray lines trace the
hotter part of the WHIM (T > rsim 106 K). We find that the
OVIII 18.97 Å is the strongest emission line, with a predicted
maximum surface brightness of ~102photon s-1
cm-2 sr-1, but a number of other lines are only
slightly weaker. All lines show a strong correlation between the
intensity of the observed flux and the density and metallicity of the
gas responsible for the emission. On the other hand, the potentially
detectable emission consistently corresponds to the temperature at which
the emissivity of the electronic transition peaks. The emission traces
neither the baryonic nor the metal mass. In particular, the emission
that is potentially detectable with proposed missions traces overdense
(ρ > rsim 102ρmean) and metal-rich (Z
> rsim 10-1 Zsolar) gas in and around galaxies
and groups. While soft X-ray line emission is therefore not a promising
route to close the baryon budget, it does offer the exciting possibility
to image the gas accreting on to and flowing out of galaxies.