The role of thermal evaporation in galaxy formation
Carlo Nipoti (1), James Binney (2) ((1) Bologna University, (2) Oxford, University)

TL;DR
This paper proposes that thermal evaporation of cold gas by virial-temperature gas influences galaxy core properties and star formation, explaining differences between massive and less massive elliptical galaxies and the absence of blue, star-forming galaxies in massive halos.
Contribution
It introduces a model where thermal evaporation determines galaxy core profiles and star formation activity, linking gas physics to galaxy evolution features.
Findings
Younger stellar populations in power-law SB profile galaxies.
Thermal evaporation inhibits star formation in massive galaxies.
Correlation between black hole accretion modes and galaxy mass.
Abstract
In colour-magnitude diagrams most galaxies fall in either the ``blue cloud'' or the ``red sequence'', with the red sequence extending to significantly brighter magnitudes than the blue cloud. The bright-end of the red sequence comprises elliptical galaxies (Es) with boxy isophotes and luminosity profiles with shallow central cores, while fainter Es have disky isophotes and power-law inner surface-brightness (SB) profiles. An analysis of published data reveals that the centres of galaxies with power-law central SB profiles have younger stellar populations than the centres of cored galaxies. We argue that thermal evaporation of cold gas by virial-temperature gas plays an important role in determining these phenomena. In less massive galaxies, thermal evaporation is not very efficient, so significant amounts of cold gas can reach the galaxy centre and fill a central core with newly formed…
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