Gas accretion in Milky Way-like galaxies: temporal and radial dependencies
Sebastian E. Nuza, Cecilia Scannapieco, Cristina Chiappini, Thiago C., Junqueira, Ivan Minchev, Marie Martig

TL;DR
This study investigates gas accretion patterns in Milky Way-like galaxies through simulations, revealing two main accretion phases and supporting inside-out disc formation, with implications for chemical evolution models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of temporal and radial gas accretion dependencies in simulated MW-like galaxies, validating key assumptions of chemical evolution models.
Findings
Gas accretion occurs in two phases: early violent and later slow decline.
Simulated accretion rates align with observed values of 0.6-1 M_sun/yr.
Inside-out growth is supported but varies with merger history.
Abstract
One of the fundamental assumptions of chemical evolution models (CEMs) of the Milky Way (MW) and other spirals is that higher gas accretion rates are expected in the past, and in the inner regions of the Galaxy. This leads to the so-called `inside-out disc formation scenario'. Yet, these are probably the most unconstrained inputs of such models. In the present paper, we aim at investigating these main assumptions by studying how gas is accreted in four simulated MW-like galaxies assembled within the CDM scenario. The galaxies were obtained using two different simulation techniques, cosmological setups and initial conditions. Two of them are MW candidates corresponding to the chemodynamical model of Minchev et al. (2013, 2014) (known as MCM) and the Local Group cosmological simulation of Nuza et al. (2014). We investigate vertical and radial gas accretion on to galaxy discs as a…
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