The COS-Holes Survey: Connecting Galaxy Black Hole Mass with the State of the CGM

Author:

Garza Samantha L.ORCID,Werk Jessica K.ORCID,Oppenheimer Benjamin D.ORCID,Tchernyshyov KirillORCID,Sanchez N. NicoleORCID,Faerman YakovORCID,Rubin Kate H. R.ORCID,Bentz Misty C.ORCID,Davies Jonathan J.ORCID,Burchett Joseph N.ORCID,Crain Robert A.ORCID,Prochaska J. XavierORCID

Abstract

Abstract We present an analysis of Hubble Space Telescope COS/G160M observations of C IV in the inner circumgalactic medium (CGM) of a novel sample of eight z ∼ 0, LL galaxies, paired with UV-bright QSOs at impact parameters (R proj) between 25 and 130 kpc. The galaxies in this stellar-mass-controlled sample (log10 M /M ∼ 10.2–10.9 M ) host supermassive black holes (SMBHs) with dynamically measured masses spanning log10 M BH/M ∼ 6.8–8.4; this allows us to compare our results with models of galaxy formation where the integrated feedback history from the SMBH alters the CGM over long timescales. We find that the C IV column density measurements (N C IV; average log10 N C IV,CH = 13.94 ± 0.09 cm−2) are largely consistent with existing measurements from other surveys of N C IV in the CGM (average log10 N C IV,Lit = 13.90 ± 0.08 cm−2), but do not show obvious variation as a function of the SMBH mass. By contrast, specific star formation rate (sSFR) is highly correlated with the ionized content of the CGM. We find a large spread in sSFR for galaxies with log10 M BH/M > 7.0, where the CGM C IV content shows a clear dependence on galaxy sSFR but not M BH. Our results do not indicate an obvious causal link between CGM C IV and the mass of the galaxy’s SMBH; however, through comparisons to the EAGLE, Romulus25, and IllustrisTNG simulations, we find that our sample is likely too small to constrain such causality.

Funder

Space Telescope Science Institute

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

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