Cold gas accretion in galaxies
R. Sancisi, F. Fraternali, T. Oosterloo, J. M. van der Hulst

TL;DR
This paper reviews evidence for cold gas accretion in galaxies, highlighting observational phenomena like HI clouds, warps, and lopsidedness, and discusses the implications for galaxy evolution and star formation.
Contribution
It synthesizes recent observational evidence and proposes that both satellite mergers and intergalactic medium infall contribute to cold gas accretion in galaxies.
Findings
Average visible accretion rate is at least 0.2 solar masses per year.
Additional gas infall from the intergalactic medium is needed to sustain star formation.
Multiple phenomena support ongoing cold gas accretion in galaxies.
Abstract
Evidence for the accretion of cold gas in galaxies has been rapidly accumulating in the past years. HI observations of galaxies and their environment have brought to light new facts and phenomena which are evidence of ongoing or recent accretion: 1) A large number of galaxies are accompanied by gas-rich dwarfs or are surrounded by HI cloud complexes, tails and filaments. It may be regarded as direct evidence of cold gas accretion in the local universe. It is probably the same kind of phenomenon of material infall as the stellar streams observed in the halos of our galaxy and M31. 2) Considerable amounts of extra-planar HI have been found in nearby spiral galaxies. While a large fraction of this gas is produced by galactic fountains, it is likely that a part of it is of extragalactic origin. 3) Spirals are known to have extended and warped outer layers of HI. It is not clear how these…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
