X-ray coronae in simulations of disc galaxy formation
Robert A. Crain, Ian G. McCarthy, Carlos S. Frenk, Tom Theuns, Joop, Schaye

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that disc galaxies have diffuse, X-ray luminous coronae consistent with observations, revealing the impact of entropy and feedback processes on their properties.
Contribution
First simulation-based analysis demonstrating that X-ray coronae in disc galaxies match observed scaling relations and are shaped by entropy increases from feedback and star formation.
Findings
Simulations reproduce observed X-ray luminosity scaling with galaxy properties.
Coronae are more diffuse and less luminous than simple models predict.
Star formation is fueled by hot gas cooling from the corona.
Abstract
The existence of X-ray luminous gaseous coronae around massive disc galaxies is a long-standing prediction of galaxy formation theory in the cold dark matter cosmogony. This prediction has garnered little observational support, with non-detections commonplace and detections for only a relatively small number of galaxies which are much less luminous than expected. We investigate the coronal properties of a large sample of bright, disc-dominated galaxies extracted from the GIMIC suite of cosmological hydrodynamic simulations recently presented by Crain et al. Remarkably, the simulations reproduce the observed scalings of X-ray luminosity with K-band luminosity and star formation rate and, when account is taken of the density structure of the halo, with disc rotation velocity as well. Most of the star formation in the simulated galaxies (which have realistic stellar mass fractions) is…
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