The Statistical and Physical Properties of the Low-Redshift LYα Forest Observed with the Hubble Space Telescope/STIS

Tripp, Todd M.; Davé, Romeel

United States

Abstract

We examine the Lyα absorber population at z<0.3 detected in spectra of the quasars PG 0953+415 and H1821+643 taken with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on board the Hubble Space Telescope. We compare their statistical properties to those in carefully constructed mock quasar spectra drawn from a cosmological hydrodynamic simulation of a Λ-dominated cold dark matter universe. We find very good agreement in the column density and b-parameter distributions, down to the smallest observable absorbers with NHI~1012.3 cm- 2. The observed absorber population is complete for NHI>~1013 cm- 2, with a column density distribution slope of β=2.04+/-0.23 and a median b-parameter of 21 km s-1 above this limit. The intergalactic gas giving rise to these weak absorbers is analogous to that at high redshift, located in diffuse large-scale structures that are highly photoionized by the metagalactic UV flux, though a greater number arise within shock-heated warm gas. The density, temperature, and column density of these absorbers follow similar relationships of those at high redshift, though with substantially larger scatter due to the shock-heated gas. The b-parameters typically have a significant contribution from thermal broadening, which facilitates a measurement of the low-z intergalactic medium temperature as traced by Lyα absorbers. From our simulation we estimate TIGM~5000 K, with an upper limit of 104 K, at the mean density. The agreement in predicted and observed amplitude of the column density distributions allows us to measure the H I photoionization rate at z=0.17 to be ΓHI=10-13.3+/-0.7 s-1 (estimated modeling uncertainty), close to predictions based on quasar properties. Based on observations with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555.

2001 The Astrophysical Journal
eHST 94