Bibcode
Altay, Gabriel; Theuns, Tom; Schaye, Joop; Booth, C. M.; Dalla Vecchia, C.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 436, Issue 3, p.2689-2707
Fecha de publicación:
12
2013
Número de citas
42
Número de citas referidas
42
Descripción
We compute the z = 3 neutral hydrogen column density distribution
function f(NHI) for 19 simulations drawn from the
Overwhelmingly Large Simulations project using a post-processing
correction for self-shielding calculated with full radiative transfer of
the ionizing background radiation. We investigate how different physical
processes and parameters affect the abundance of Lyman-limit systems
(LLSs) and damped Lyman α absorbers including: (i) metal-line
cooling; (ii) the efficiency of feedback from supernovae and active
galactic nuclei; (iii) the effective equation of state for the
interstellar medium; (iv) cosmological parameters; (v) the assumed star
formation law and (vi) the timing of hydrogen reionization. We find that
the normalization and slope, D = d log _{10} f /d log _{10} N_{H I}, of
f(NHI) in the LLS regime are robust to changes in these
physical processes. Among physically plausible models, f(NHI)
varies by less than 0.2 dex and D varies by less than 0.18 for LLSs.
This is primarily due to the fact that these uncertain physical
processes mostly affect star-forming gas which contributes less than 10
per cent to f(NHI) in the LLS column density range. At higher
column densities, variations in f(NHI) become larger
(approximately 0.5 dex at f(NHI) = 1022
cm-2 and 1.0 dex at f(NHI) = 1022
cm-2) and molecular hydrogen formation also becomes
important. Many of these changes can be explained in the context of
self-regulated star formation in which the amount of star-forming gas in
a galaxy will adjust such that outflows driven by feedback balance
inflows due to accretion. Tools to reproduce all figures in this work
can be found at the following url:
https://bitbucket.org/galtay/hi-cddf-owls-1