The baryonic Tully-Fisher relation and galactic outflows
Aaron A. Dutton (MPIA)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation's features are consistent with a LCDM-based galaxy formation model where galactic outflows driven by supernovae and stellar winds influence galaxy evolution and baryon retention.
Contribution
The study provides a semi-analytic LCDM model showing that galaxy outflows and star formation efficiency explain the observed baryonic Tully-Fisher relation and its scatter.
Findings
Intrinsic scatter in BTF is less than 0.15 dex.
Gas-rich galaxies have lower baryonic masses at fixed virial velocity.
The model's predictions align with observed BTF slopes when using outer rotation velocity.
Abstract
Most of the baryons in the Universe are not in the form of stars and cold gas in galaxies. Galactic outflows driven by supernovae/stellar winds are the leading mechanism for explaining this fact. The scaling relation between galaxy mass and outer rotation velocity (also known as the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation, BTF) has recently been used as evidence against this viewpoint. We use a LCDM based semi-analytic disk galaxy formation model to investigate these claims. In our model, galaxies with less efficient star formation and higher gas fractions are more efficient at ejecting gas from galaxies. This is due to the fact that galaxies with less efficient star formation and higher gas fractions tend to live in dark matter haloes with lower circular velocities, from which less energy is required to escape the potential well. In our model the intrinsic scatter in the BTF is 0.15 dex, and…
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