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Asymmetric eROSITA bubbles as the evidence of a circumgalactic medium wind

Authors :
Mou, Guobin
Sun, Dongze
Fang, Taotao
Wang, Wei
Zhang, Ruiyu
Yuan, Feng
Sofue, Yoshiaki
Wang, Tinggui
He, Zhicheng
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The eROSITA bubbles are detected via the instrument with the same name. The northern bubble shows noticeable asymmetric features, including distortion to the west and enhancement in the eastern edge, while the southern counterpart is significantly dimmer. Their origins are debated. Here, we performed hydrodynamic simulations showing that asymmetric eROSITA bubbles favor a dynamic, circumgalactic medium wind model, but disfavor other mechanisms such as a non-axisymmetric halo gas or a tilted nuclear outflow. The wind from the east by north direction in Galactic coordinates blows across the northern halo with a velocity of about 200 km s$^{-1}$, and part of it enters the southern halo. This creates a dynamic halo medium and redistributes both density and metallicity within. This naturally explains the asymmetric bubbles in both the morphology and surface brightness. Our results suggest that our Galaxy is accreting low-abundance circumgalactic medium from one side while providing outflow feedback.<br />Comment: Published in Nature Communications, file size 10MB

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2212.02270
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-36478-0