Cold accretion flows and the nature of high column density HI absorption at redshift 3
Freeke van de Voort (1), Joop Schaye (1), Gabriel Altay (2), Tom, Theuns (2, 3) ((1) Leiden Observatory, Leiden University (2) Institute for, Computational Cosmology, Durham University (3) Department of Physics,, University of Antwerp)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations with radiative transfer to demonstrate that cold accretion flows significantly contribute to high column density HI absorption at redshift 3, supporting their observational detection.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based evidence linking cold accretion flows to high column density HI absorbers at z=3, confirming their observational signatures.
Findings
Nearly all HI absorption arises from gas colder than 10^5.5 K.
Most HI with N_HI > 10^17 cm^-2 is within halos, especially below 10^10 Msun.
Cold accretion flows are essential for reproducing observed HI absorber statistics.
Abstract
Simulations predict that galaxies grow primarily through the accretion of gas that has not gone through an accretion shock near the virial radius and that this cold gas flows towards the central galaxy along dense filaments and streams. There is, however, little observational evidence for the existence of these cold flows. We use a large, cosmological, hydrodynamical simulation that has been post-processed with radiative transfer to study the contribution of cold flows to the observed z=3 column density distribution of neutral hydrogen, which our simulation reproduces. We find that nearly all of the HI absorption arises in gas that has remained colder than 10^5.5 K, at least while it was extragalactic. In addition, the majority of the HI is rapidly falling towards a nearby galaxy, with non-negligible contributions from outflowing and static gas. Above a column density of N_HI = 10^17…
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