TL;DR
This paper introduces a flexible, computationally efficient method to create realistic rotating galactic corona models that align with observational data and cosmological simulations, improving the analysis of galaxy gaseous halos.
Contribution
The authors develop a general approach to construct axisymmetric baroclinic equilibrium models of rotating galactic coronae, bridging the gap between simple analytic and complex simulation-based models.
Findings
Models can have realistic rotation speed profiles decreasing with distance from the galactic plane.
Models reproduce angular momentum distributions similar to cosmological simulations.
A Python code is provided for constructing these models given specific functions and potential.
Abstract
Fitting equilibrium dynamical models to observational data is an essential step in understanding the structure of the gaseous hot haloes that surround our own and other galaxies. However, the two main categories of models that are used in the literature are poorly suited for this task: (i) simple barotropic models are analytic and can therefore be adjusted to match the observations, but are clearly unrealistic because the rotational velocity does not depend on the distance from the galactic plane, while (ii) models obtained as a result of cosmological galaxy formation simulations are more realistic, but are impractical to fit to observations due to high computational cost. Here we bridge this gap by presenting a general method to construct axisymmetric baroclinic equilibrium models of rotating galactic coronae in arbitrary external potentials. We consider in particular…
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