Gravitational Quenching in Massive Galaxies and Clusters by Clumpy Accretion
Avishai Dekel, Yuval Birnboim

TL;DR
This paper proposes that gravitational energy from cosmological accretion, delivered via clumpy cold flows, can effectively quench star formation in massive galaxies and clusters, offering an alternative to AGN feedback.
Contribution
It introduces a gravitational heating mechanism involving clumpy accretion and ram-pressure drag as a long-term quenching process in massive haloes, expanding beyond shock heating models.
Findings
Clumpy cold flows can deliver sufficient gravitational energy to heat inner halo gas.
Clumps between 10^5 and 10^8 solar masses are effective in penetrating and heating the halo.
Gravitational heating can account for quenching without requiring AGN feedback.
Abstract
We consider a simple gravitational-heating mechanism for the long-term quenching of cooling flows and star formation in massive dark-matter haloes hosting ellipticals and clusters. The virial shock heating in haloes >10^12 Mo triggers quenching in 10^12-13 Mo haloes (Birnboim, Dekel & Neistein 2007). We show that the long-term quenching in haloes >Mmin~7x10^12 Mo could be due to the gravitational energy of cosmological accretion delivered to the inner-halo hot gas by cold flows via ram-pressure drag and local shocks. Mmin is obtained by comparing the gravitational power of infall into the potential well with the overall radiative cooling rate. The heating wins if the gas inner density cusp is not steeper than r^-0.5 and if the masses in the cold and hot phases are comparable. The effect is stronger at higher redshifts, making the maintenance easier also at later times. Clumps >10^5 Mo…
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