The Smith Cloud: surviving a high speed transit of the Galactic disc
Thor Tepper-Garcia, Joss Bland-Hawthorn

TL;DR
The paper models the Smith Cloud as a gas streamer that survived a Galactic disc transit due to a confining dark matter subhalo, providing insights into high-velocity cloud survival and Galactic accretion processes.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent, multi-phase model showing that dark matter subhalos are essential for high-velocity cloud survival during disc transits.
Findings
Dark matter subhalos enable cloud survival during disc crossing.
The Smith Cloud's morphology is explained by a gas streamer detached from a DM subhalo.
Galactic accretion of gas via subhalos is significant over cosmic time.
Abstract
The origin and survival of the Smith high-velocity HI cloud has so far defied explanation. This object has several remarkable properties: (i) its prograde orbit is ~100 km/s faster than the underlying Galactic rotation; (ii) its total gas mass () exceeds the mass of all other high-velocity clouds (HVC) outside of the Magellanic Stream; (iii) its head-tail morphology extends to the Galactic HI disc, indicating some sort of interaction. The Smith Cloud's kinetic energy rules out models based on ejection from the disc. We construct a dynamically self-consistent, multi-phase model of the Galaxy with a view to exploring whether the Smith Cloud can be understood in terms of an infalling, compact HVC that has transited the Galactic disc. We show that while a dark-matter (DM) free HVC of sufficient mass and density can reach the disc, it does not survive…
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