Feedback and Recycled Wind Accretion: Assembling the z=0 Galaxy Mass Function
Benjamin D. Oppenheimer, Romeel Dav\'e, Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s}, Mark, Fardal, Neal Katz, Juna A. Kollmeier, David H. Weinberg

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations with observationally-constrained winds to show that recycled wind accretion significantly influences the galaxy stellar mass function, highlighting the importance of re-accretion processes over simple ejection.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of wind recycling as a key factor in shaping the galaxy stellar mass function, emphasizing the role of re-accretion of ejected material.
Findings
Recycled wind accretion dominates gas infall at z<1.
Including wind recycling reproduces observed galaxy mass functions.
Recycling timescales vary with galaxy mass and environment.
Abstract
We analyse cosmological hydrodynamic simulations that include observationally-constrained prescriptions for galactic outflows. If these simulated winds accurately represent winds in the real Universe, then material previously ejected in winds provides the dominant source of gas infall for new star formation at redshifts z<1. This recycled wind accretion, or wind mode, provides a third physically distinct accretion channel in addition to the "hot" and "cold" modes emphasised in recent theoretical studies. Because of the interaction between outflows and gas in and around halos, the recycling timescale of wind material (t_rec) is shorter in higher-mass systems, which reside in denser gaseous environments. In these simulations, this differential recycling plays a central role in shaping the present-day galaxy stellar mass function (GSMF). If we remove all particles that were ever ejected in…
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