The rates and modes of gas accretion on to galaxies and their gaseous haloes
Freeke van de Voort (1), Joop Schaye (1), C. M. Booth (1), Marcel R., Haas (1), Claudio Dalla Vecchia (1, 2) ((1) Leiden Observatory, Leiden, University (2) Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze gas accretion rates onto galaxies and haloes, revealing how different modes and feedback processes influence galaxy growth across various masses and redshifts.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of gas accretion modes onto galaxies and haloes, considering a wider range of masses, redshifts, and feedback effects than previous studies.
Findings
Gas accretion rates onto haloes are weakly dependent on halo mass.
Hot mode accretion increases with decreasing redshift and halo mass.
Cold mode accretion significantly contributes to star formation across all halo masses.
Abstract
(Abridged) We study the rate at which gas accretes onto galaxies and haloes and investigate whether the accreted gas was shocked to high temperatures before reaching a galaxy. For this purpose we use a suite of large cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations from the OWLS project. We improve on previous work by considering a wider range of halo masses and redshifts, by distinguishing accretion onto haloes and galaxies, by including important feedback processes, and by comparing simulations with different physics. The specific rate of gas accretion onto haloes is, like that for dark matter, only weakly dependent on halo mass. For halo masses Mhalo>>10^11 Msun it is relatively insensitive to feedback processes. In contrast, accretion rates onto galaxies are determined by radiative cooling and by outflows driven by supernovae and active galactic nuclei. Galactic winds increase the halo mass…
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