Interaction between the intergalactic medium and galactic outflows from dwarf galaxies

Citation
I. Murakami et A. Babul, Interaction between the intergalactic medium and galactic outflows from dwarf galaxies, M NOT R AST, 309(1), 1999, pp. 161-179
Citations number
83
Categorie Soggetti
Space Sciences
Journal title
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
ISSN journal
00358711 → ACNP
Volume
309
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
161 - 179
Database
ISI
SICI code
0035-8711(19991011)309:1<161:IBTIMA>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
We have carried out two-dimensional (2D) hydrodynamical simulations in orde r to study the interaction between supernova-powered gas outflows from low- mass galaxies and the local intergalactic medium (IGM). We are specifically interested in investigating whether a high-pressure IGM, such as that in c lusters of galaxies, can prevent the gas from escaping from the galaxy, as suggested by Babul & Rees, We find that this is indeed the case as long as ram pressure effects are negligible. The interface between the outflow and the ambient IGM is demarcated by a dense expanding shell formed by the gas swept up by the outflow. A sufficiently high IGM pressure can bring the she ll to a halt well before it escapes the galaxy. Galaxies in such high-press ure environments are, however, more likely than not to be ploughing through the IGM at relatively high velocities. Hence, they will also be subject to ram pressure, which acts to strip the gas from the galaxy. We have carried out simulations that take into account the combined impact of ram pressure and thermal pressure. We find that ram pressure deforms the shell into a t ail-like structure, fragments it into dense clouds and eventually drags the clouds away from the galaxy. The clouds are potential sites of star format ion and if viewed during this transient phase, the galaxy will appear to ha ve a low-surface-brightness tail much like the galaxies with diffuse comet- like tails seen in the z = 1.15 cluster 3C324. The stars in the tail would, in time, stream away from the galaxy and become part of the intracluster e nvironment. In contrast, the relatively unhindered outflows in low-density, low-tempera ture environments can drive the shells of swept-up gas out to large distanc es from the galaxy. Such shells, if they intersect a quasar line of sight, would give rise to Ly alpha absorption lines of the kind seen in quasar spe ctra. In addition, the fact that outflows from low-mass galaxies can extend out to distances of 40 kpc or more indicates that such galaxies may have p layed an important role in polluting the intergalactic medium with metals.