# Cooling flow solutions for the circumgalactic medium

**Authors:** Jonathan Stern, Drummond Fielding, Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere, and Eliot Quataert

arXiv: 1906.07737 · 2019-07-17

## TL;DR

This paper develops analytic and simulation-based models of cooling flows in galaxy halos, showing they can explain certain observations and serve as benchmarks for feedback processes in galaxy formation.

## Contribution

It introduces a family of steady-state cooling flow solutions for galaxy halos, linking inflow rates to halo properties and matching several observational features.

## Key findings

- Cooling flows can predict observed absorption and emission features.
- Steady-state solutions are determined by a single parameter, such as inflow rate.
- Some galaxy clusters' entropy profiles align with cooling flow models.

## Abstract

In several models of galaxy formation feedback occurs in cycles or mainly at high redshift. At times and in regions where feedback heating is ineffective, hot gas in the galaxy halo is expected to form a cooling flow, where the gas advects inward on a cooling timescale. Cooling flow solutions can thus be used as a benchmark for observations and simulations to constrain the timing and extent of feedback heating. Using analytic calculations and idealized 3D hydrodynamic simulations, we show that for a given halo mass and cooling function, steady-state cooling flows form a single-parameter family of solutions, while initially hydrostatic gaseous halos converge on one of these solutions within a cooling time. The solution is thus fully determined once either the mass inflow rate $\dot{M}$ or the total halo gas mass are known. In the Milky Way (MW) halo, a cooling flow with $\dot{M}$ equal to the star formation rate predicts a ratio of the cooling time to the free-fall time of ~10, similar to some feedback-regulated models. This solution also correctly predicts observed OVII and OVIII absorption columns, and the gas density profile implied by OVII and OVIII emission. These results suggest ongoing heating by feedback may be negligible in the inner MW halo. Extending similar solutions out to the cooling radius however underpredicts observed OVI columns around the MW and around other low-redshift star-forming galaxies. This can be reconciled with the successes of the cooling flow model with either a mechanism which preferentially heats the OVI-bearing outer halo, or alternatively if OVI traces cool photoionized gas beyond the accretion shock. We also demonstrate that the entropy profiles of some of the most relaxed clusters are reasonably well described by a cooling flow solution.

## Full text

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## Figures

22 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.07737/full.md

## References

126 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.07737/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.07737