The initial conditions and evolution of isolated galaxy models: effects of the hot gas halo
Jeong-Sun Hwang, Changbom Park, Jun-Hwan Choi

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how different hot gas halo configurations influence the evolution, star formation, and gas accretion in Milky Way-like galaxy models, highlighting the importance of including gas halos in galaxy evolution studies.
Contribution
It introduces detailed galaxy models with varying gas halo profiles and demonstrates their significant impact on galaxy evolution and star formation, emphasizing the necessity of considering gas halos in simulations.
Findings
Gas halos significantly affect star formation rates.
NFW gas halos lead to higher SFRs than isothermal halos.
Gas accretion occurs mainly in the inner disk and is influenced by halo density.
Abstract
We construct several Milky Way-like galaxy models containing a gas halo (as well as gaseous and stellar disks, a dark matter halo, and a stellar bulge) following either an isothermal or an NFW density profile with varying mass and initial spin. In addition, galactic winds associated with star formation are tested in some of the simulations. We evolve these isolated galaxy models using the GADGET-3 -body/hydrodynamic simulation code, paying particular attention to the effects of the gas halo on the evolution. We find that the evolution of the models is strongly affected by the adopted gas halo component. The model without a gas halo shows an increasing star formation rate (SFR) at the beginning of the simulation for some hundreds of millions of years and then a continuously decreasing rate to the end of the run at 3 Gyr. On the other hand, the SFRs in the models with a gas halo emerge…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
