Gas Condensation in the Galactic Halo
M. Ryan Joung, Greg L. Bryan, and Mary E. Putman (Columbia University)

TL;DR
This study uses advanced hydrodynamic simulations to explore the conditions under which hot halo gas forms clouds that can cool and potentially fuel star formation, revealing the importance of nonlinear perturbations and the ratio of cooling to dynamical times.
Contribution
It extends previous linear analysis into the nonlinear regime, identifying critical conditions for cloud cooling and disruption in galactic halos.
Findings
Cloud formation depends on the ratio of cooling time to acceleration time.
Overdensities of 10-20 are marginally unstable for cooling.
Enhanced overdensities in cold streams increase cooling likelihood.
Abstract
Using adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) hydrodynamic simulations of vertically stratified hot halo gas, we examine the conditions under which clouds can form and condense out of the hot halo medium to potentially fuel star formation in the gaseous disk. We find that halo clouds do not develop from linear isobaric perturbations. This is a regime where the cooling time is longer than the Brunt-Vaisala time, confirming previous linear analysis. We extend the analysis into the nonlinear regime by considering mildly or strongly nonlinear perturbations with overdensities up to 100, also varying the initial height, the cloud size, and the metallicity of the gas. Here, the result depends on the ratio of cooling time to the time required to accelerate the cloud to the sound speed (similar to the dynamical time). If the ratio exceeds a critical value near unity, the cloud is accelerated without…
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