The Cosmic Baryon Cycle and Galaxy Mass Assembly in the FIRE Simulations
Daniel Angl\'es-Alc\'azar (Northwestern), Claude-Andr\'e, Faucher-Gigu\`ere (Northwestern), Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s} (UC San Diego), Philip, F. Hopkins (Caltech), Eliot Quataert (UC Berkeley), Norman Murray (CITA)

TL;DR
This study uses FIRE cosmological simulations to analyze the baryon cycle and galaxy mass assembly, revealing the dominant roles of in situ star formation, wind recycling, and external material accretion across different galaxy masses and redshifts.
Contribution
It provides a detailed quantification of the sources of galaxy growth, highlighting the significance of wind transfer and recycling processes in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Re-accretion of ejected gas often dominates galaxy gas supply.
Wind transfer can surpass fresh accretion in L* galaxies at z=0.
Recycling timescales are shorter than previously thought.
Abstract
We use cosmological simulations from the FIRE (Feedback In Realistic Environments) project to study the baryon cycle and galaxy mass assembly for central galaxies in the halo mass range . By tracing cosmic inflows, galactic outflows, gas recycling, and merger histories, we quantify the contribution of physically distinct sources of material to galaxy growth. We show that in situ star formation fueled by fresh accretion dominates the early growth of galaxies of all masses, while the re-accretion of gas previously ejected in galactic winds often dominates the gas supply for a large portion of every galaxy's evolution. Externally processed material contributes increasingly to the growth of central galaxies at lower redshifts. This includes stars formed ex situ and gas delivered by mergers, as well as smooth intergalactic transfer of gas from…
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