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Ultraviolet Perspectives on Diffuse Gas in the Largest Cosmic Structures

Authors :
Burchett, Joseph N.
Nagai, Daisuke
Butsky, Iryna
Tremmel, Michael
Bordoloi, Rongmon
Bryan, Greg
Cai, Zheng
Canning, Rebecca
Chen, Hsiao-Wen
Coil, Alison
Fielding, Drummond
Fumagalli, Michele
Johnson, Sean D.
Khaire, Vikram
Lee, Khee-Gan
Lehner, Nicolas
Mandelker, Nir
O'Meara, John
Muzahid, Sowgat
Nelson, Dylan
Oppenheimer, Benjamin D.
Postman, Marc
Peeples, Molly S.
Quinn, Thomas
Rafelski, Marc
Ribaudo, Joseph
Rubin, Kate
Stern, Jonathan
Tejos, Nicolas
Tonnesen, Stephanie
Tripp, Todd
Wang, Q. Daniel
Willmer, Christopher N. A.
Zheng, Yong
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The past decade has seen an explosion of discoveries and new insights into the diffuse gas within galaxies, galaxy clusters, and the filaments composing the Cosmic Web. A new decade will bring fresh opportunities to further this progress towards developing a comprehensive view of the composition, thermal state, and physical processes of diffuse gas in the Universe. Ultraviolet (UV) spectroscopy, probing diffuse 10^4-10^6 K gas at high spectral resolution, is uniquely poised to (1) witness environmental galaxy quenching processes in action, such as strangulation and tidal- and ram-pressure stripping, (2) directly account for the baryon content of galaxy clusters in the cold-warm (T<10^6 K) gas, (3) determine the phase structure and kinematics of gas participating in the equilibrium-regulating exchange of energy at the cores of galaxy clusters, and (4) map cold streams and filaments of the Cosmic Web that feed galaxies and clusters. With a substantial UV undertaking beyond the Hubble Space Telescope, all of the above would be achievable over the entire epoch of galaxy cluster formation. Such capabilities, coupled with already-planned advancements at other wavelengths, will transform extragalactic astronomy by revealing the dominant formation and growth mechanisms of gaseous halos over the mass spectrum, settling the debate between early- and late-time metal enrichment scenarios, and revealing how the ecosystems in which galaxies reside ultimately facilitate their demise.<br />Comment: White Paper submitted to the Astro2020 Decadal Survey

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1903.06201
Document Type :
Working Paper