The impact of feedback on cosmological gas accretion
Dylan Nelson (Harvard/CfA), Shy Genel (Harvard/CfA), Mark Vogelsberger, (MIT), Volker Springel (HITS), Debora Sijacki (IoA Cambridge), Paul Torrey, (MIT/Caltech), Lars Hernquist (Harvard/CfA)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to examine how baryonic feedback processes influence galaxy gas accretion, revealing suppression of inflow, recycling effects, and increased transit times due to feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of gas accretion with and without feedback, highlighting the significant impact of feedback on accretion rates, gas recycling, and transit times across cosmic time.
Findings
Feedback suppresses smooth gas inflow at all redshifts.
Recycling of gas across the virial boundary increases with feedback.
Halo transit time of gas increases by a factor of 2-3 due to feedback.
Abstract
We investigate how the way galaxies acquire their gas across cosmic time in cosmological hydrodynamic simulations is modified by a comprehensive physical model for baryonic feedback processes. To do so, we compare two simulations -- with and without feedback -- both evolved with the moving mesh code AREPO. The feedback runs implement the full physics model of the Illustris simulation project, including star formation driven galactic winds and energetic feedback from supermassive blackholes. We explore: (a) the accretion rate of material contributing to the net growth of galaxies and originating directly from the intergalactic medium, finding that feedback strongly suppresses the raw, as well as the net, inflow of this "smooth mode" gas at all redshifts, regardless of the temperature history of newly acquired gas. (b) At the virial radius the temperature and radial flux of inflowing gas…
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