Galactic Winds in Cosmological Simulations of the Circumgalactic Medium
Paramita Barai, Matteo Viel, Stefano Borgani, Edoardo Tescari, Luca, Tornatore, Klaus Dolag, Madhura Killedar, Pierluigi Monaco, Valentina, D'Odorico, Stefano Cristiani

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to compare different models of galactic outflows and their effects on the circumgalactic medium, revealing how wind properties influence metal enrichment, star formation, and gas distribution.
Contribution
It introduces new observationally-constrained sub-resolution models of galactic outflows and analyzes their impact on the CGM across redshifts 2-4, highlighting differences in metal enrichment and gas properties.
Findings
RVWb model significantly enriches the CGM compared to no wind.
CW and RVWa models similarly suppress star formation and enrich the IGM.
Predicted observational diagnostics can distinguish between outflow scenarios.
Abstract
(Abridged) We explore new observationally-constrained sub-resolution models of galactic outflows and investigate their impact on the circumgalactic medium (CGM) over redshifts z = 2 - 4. We perform cosmological hydrodynamic simulations, including star formation, chemical enrichment, and four cases of SNe-driven outflows: no wind (NW), an energy-driven constant velocity wind (CW), a radially varying wind (RVWa) where the outflow velocity has a positive correlation with galactocentric distance (r), and a RVW with additional dependence on halo mass (RVWb). Overall, we find that the outflows expel metal-enriched gas away from galaxies, significantly quench star formation, and enrich the CGM. At z = 2, the radial profiles of gas properties around galaxy centers are most sensitive to the choice of the wind model for halo masses (10^9 - 10^11) M_sun. We infer that the RVWb model is similar to…
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