Supernova-driven gas accretion in the Milky Way
A. Marasco, F. Fraternali, J. J. Binney

TL;DR
This study models the Galactic fountain to explain Milky Way's neutral hydrogen emission, revealing gas accretion processes that sustain star formation and impact dark matter distribution estimates.
Contribution
It introduces a new Galactic fountain model that accurately reproduces observed HI emission and quantifies gas accretion rates consistent with star formation needs.
Findings
Model reproduces HI emission at Intermediate Velocities
Gas accretion rate of ~2 solar masses per year supports star formation
Outer HI disc structure differs from previous dark matter inferences
Abstract
We use a model of the Galactic fountain to simulate the neutral-hydrogen emission of the Milky Way Galaxy. The model was developed to account for data on external galaxies with sensitive HI data. For appropriate parameter values, the model reproduces well the HI emission observed at Intermediate Velocities. The optimal parameters imply that cool gas is ionised as it is blasted out of the disc, but becomes neutral when its vertical velocity has been reduced by ~30 per cent. The parameters also imply that cooling of coronal gas in the wakes of fountain clouds transfers gas from the virial-temperature corona to the disc at ~2 Mo/yr. This rate agrees, to within the uncertainties with the accretion rate required to sustain the Galaxy's star formation without depleting the supply of interstellar gas. We predict the radial profile of accretion, which is an important input for models of…
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