Connecting Star Formation Quenching with Galaxy Structure and Supermassive Black Holes through Gravitational Heating of Cooling Flows
Fulai Guo

TL;DR
This paper proposes a gravitational heating model linking galaxy structure, supermassive black holes, and star formation quenching, supported by hydrodynamic simulations showing how galaxy potential influences cooling flows and bulge growth.
Contribution
It introduces a new physical mechanism explaining the correlation between galaxy structure and quenching, emphasizing the role of gravitational potential and black hole influence in cooling flow regulation.
Findings
Cooling flows depend on galaxy's gravitational potential.
Bulge growth can halt cooling catastrophes via compressional heating.
A structural predictor for quenching is identified as M_*/R_eff^{1.5}.
Abstract
Recent observations suggested that star formation quenching in galaxies is related to galaxy structure. Here we propose a new mechanism to explain the physical origin of this correlation. We assume that while quiescent galaxies are maintained quenched by a feedback mechanism, cooling flows in the hot halo gas can still develop intermittently. We study cooling flows in a large suite of around 90 hydrodynamic simulations of an isolated galaxy group, and find that the flow development depends significantly on the gravitational potential well in the central galaxy. If the galaxy's gravity is not strong enough, cooling flows result in a central cooling catastrophe, supplying cold gas and feeding star formation to galactic bulges. When the bulge grows prominent enough, compressional heating starts to offset radiative cooling and maintains cooling flows in a long-term hot mode without…
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