The Impact of cold gas accretion above a mass floor on galaxy scaling relations
N. Bouche (1,3), A. Dekel (2), R. Genzel (1), S. Genel (1), G. Cresci, (4), N. M. Forster Schreiber (1), K. L. Shapiro (5), R. I. Davies (1), L., Tacconi (1) ((1) MPE, (2) Hebrew University, (3) UC Santa Barbara, (4), Arcetri, (5) UC Berkeley)

TL;DR
This paper presents a simple galaxy evolution model emphasizing a halo mass floor that quenches cold gas accretion below a certain mass, successfully explaining observed galaxy scaling relations and cosmic star formation history from z=2 to present.
Contribution
Introduces a galaxy evolution model incorporating a halo mass floor that accounts for key observed relations and cosmic star formation decline, outperforming previous models without this feature.
Findings
The mass floor M_{min}~10^{11} solar masses explains galaxy scaling relations.
The model reproduces the cosmic SFR density evolution from z~6 to 0.
Photo-ionization feedback likely causes the mass floor.
Abstract
Using the cosmological baryonic accretion rate and normal star formation efficiencies, we present a very simple model for star-forming galaxies (SFGs) that accounts for the mass and redshift dependencies of the SFR-Mass and Tully-Fisher relations from z=2 to the present. The time evolution follows from the fact that each modelled galaxy approaches a steady state where the SFR follows the (net) cold gas accretion rate. The key feature of the model is a halo mass floor M_{min}~10^{11} below which accretion is quenched in order to simultaneously account for the observed slopes of the SFR-Mass and Tully-Fischer relations. The same successes cannot be achieved via a star-formation threshold (or delay) nor by varying the SF efficiency or the feedback efficiency. Combined with the mass ceiling for cold accretion due to virial shock heating, the mass floor M_{min} explains galaxy "downsizing",…
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