Simulating the Gaseous Halos of Galaxies
Tobias Kaufmann (1), James S. Bullock (1), Ari Maller (2), Taotao, Fang (1) ((1) University of California, Irvine (2) New York City College of, Technology)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to investigate how different initial gas distributions in galaxy halos affect galaxy formation, gas cooling, and observable properties, providing insights into the nature of gaseous halos around galaxies.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the initial entropy profile of hot gas halos critically influences galaxy evolution and observable features, highlighting the importance of halo gas distribution in galaxy formation models.
Findings
Cored halos produce more realistic X-ray luminosities.
Standard cuspy halos lead to overly massive, rapidly cooling galaxies.
Extended cloud populations resemble high-velocity clouds observed in the Milky Way.
Abstract
Observations of local X-ray absorbers, high-velocity clouds, and distant quasar absorption line systems suggest that a significant fraction of baryons may reside in multi-phase, low-density, extended, ~100 kpc, gaseous halos around normal galaxies. We present a pair of high-resolution SPH (smoothed particle hydrodynamics) simulations that explore the nature of cool gas infall into galaxies, and the physical conditions necessary to support the type of gaseous halos that seem to be required by observations. The two simulations are identical other than their initial gas density distributions: one is initialized with a standard hot gas halo that traces the cuspy profile of the dark matter, and the other is initialized with a cored hot halo with a high central entropy, as might be expected in models with early pre-heating feedback. Galaxy formation proceeds in dramatically different fashions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
