Cold streams in early massive hot haloes as the main mode of galaxy formation
A. Dekel, Y. Birnboim, G. Engel, J. Freundlich, T. Goerdt, M., Mumcuoglu, E. Neistein, C. Pichon, R. Teyssier, E. Zinger

TL;DR
This paper proposes that early massive galaxies primarily formed through steady, cold gas streams penetrating hot haloes, challenging the traditional merger-driven galaxy formation model.
Contribution
It introduces a novel stream-fed galaxy formation model based on cosmological simulations, emphasizing cold gas streams as the main growth mechanism for early massive galaxies.
Findings
Most star-forming galaxies are fed by smooth cold streams.
One-third of the stream mass is in gas clumps leading to mergers.
Stream-fed galaxies likely retain their disk structure during formation.
Abstract
The massive galaxies in the young universe, ten billion years ago, formed stars at surprising intensities. Although this is commonly attributed to violent mergers, the properties of many of these galaxies are incompatible with such events, showing gas-rich, clumpy, extended rotating disks not dominated by spheroids (Genzel et al. 2006, 2008). Cosmological simulations and clustering theory are used to explore how these galaxies acquired their gas. Here we report that they are stream-fed galaxies, formed from steady, narrow, cold gas streams that penetrate the shock-heated media of massive dark matter haloes (Dekel & Birnboim 2006; Keres et al. 2005). A comparison with the observed abundance of star-forming galaxies implies that most of the input gas must rapidly convert to stars. One-third of the stream mass is in gas clumps leading to mergers of mass ratio greater than 1:10, and the…
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.
