Evidence for Cold-stream to Hot-accretion Transition as Traced by Lyα Emission from Groups and Clusters at 2 < z < 3.3

Author:

Daddi E.ORCID,Rich R. M.ORCID,Valentino F.,Jin S.,Delvecchio I.ORCID,Liu D.ORCID,Strazzullo V.,Neill J.,Gobat R.,Finoguenov A.,Bournaud F.ORCID,Elbaz D.ORCID,Kalita B. S.ORCID,O’Sullivan D.,Wang T.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract We present Keck Cosmic Web Imager observations of giant Lyα halos surrounding nine galaxy groups and clusters at 2 < z < 3.3, including five new detections and one upper limit. We find observational evidence for the cold-stream to hot-accretion transition predicted by theory by measuring a decrease in the ratio between the spatially extended Lyα luminosity and the expected baryonic accretion rate (BAR), with increasing elongation above the transition mass (M stream). This implies a modulation of the share of BAR that remains cold, diminishing quasi-linearly (logarithmic slope of 0.97 ± 0.19, 5σ significance) with the halo to M stream mass ratio. The integrated star formation rates (SFRs) and active galactic nucleus (AGN) bolometric luminosities display a potentially consistent decrease, albeit significant only at 2.6σ and 1.3σ, respectively. The higher scatter in these tracers suggests the Lyα emission might be mostly a direct product of cold accretion in these structures rather than indirect, mediated by outflows and photoionization from SFR and AGNs; this is also supported by energetics considerations. Below M stream (cold-stream regime), we measure L Lyα /BAR = 1040.51±0.16 erg s−1 M 1 yr, consistent with predictions, and SFR/BAR = 10−0.54±0.23: on average, 30 10 + 20 % of the cold streams go into stars. Above M stream (hot-accretion regime), L Lyα is set by M stream (within 0.2 dex scatter in our sample), independent of the halo mass but rising 10-fold from z = 2 to 3.

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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