# The impact of magnetic fields on cold streams feeding galaxies

**Authors:** Thomas Berlok, Christoph Pfrommer

arXiv: 1904.02167 · 2020-06-03

## TL;DR

This study investigates how magnetic fields influence the stability and longevity of cold gas streams feeding high-redshift galaxies, revealing that magnetic fields can significantly extend stream survival despite enhancing instabilities.

## Contribution

The paper provides the first spatially resolved idealized model showing magnetic fields can prolong cold stream survival by suppressing mixing, challenging previous assumptions about their destabilizing effects.

## Key findings

- Magnetic fields do not inhibit but enhance Kelvin-Helmholtz instability growth.
- Magnetic fields can increase stream survival times by 2-8 times.
- Thinner streams with magnetic fields can reach galaxies, aiding sustained star formation.

## Abstract

High redshift, massive halos are observed to have sustained, high star formation rates, which require that the amount of cold gas in the halo is continuously replenished. The cooling time scale for the hot virialized halo gas is too long to provide the source of cold gas. Supersonic, cold streams have been invoked as a mechanism for feeding massive halos at high redshift and deliver the cold gas required for continued star formation at the rates observed. This mechanism for replenishing the cold gas reservoir is motivated by some cosmological simulations. However, the cold streams are likely to be subject to the supersonic version of the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI), which eventually leads to stream disruption. Cosmological simulations have yet to obtain the spatial resolution required for understanding the detailed stability properties of cold streams. In this paper, we consider instead an idealized model of magnetized cold streams that we spatially resolve. Using linear theory we show how magnetic fields with dynamically important field strengths do not inhibit the KHI but rather enhance its growth rate. We perform nonlinear simulations of magnetized stream disruption and find that magnetic fields can nevertheless increase stream survival times by suppressing the mixing rate of cold gas with the circumgalactic medium. We find that magnetic fields can allow streams to survive $\sim 2-8$ times longer and, consequently, that streams $\sim 2-8$ times thinner can reach the central galaxy if the magnetic field strength is $\sim 0.3-0.8 \mu$G.

## Full text

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## Figures

18 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.02167/full.md

## References

90 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.02167/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.02167