The maximum accretion rate of hot gas in dark matter halos
Jonathan Stern, Drummond Fielding, Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere, and Eliot Quataert

TL;DR
This paper investigates the maximum hot gas accretion rate in dark matter halos, revealing it depends on physical conditions at galaxy scales and can sustain star formation below the traditional halo mass threshold.
Contribution
It introduces a new criterion for the maximum hot accretion rate based on physical conditions at galaxy scales, challenging previous halo-scale thresholds.
Findings
Maximum hot accretion rate scales as Mdot_crit ~ (v_c/100 km/s)^5.4
Hot mode can operate in halos below 10^12 M_sun
Star formation rates are often below the hot accretion limit
Abstract
We revisit the question of 'hot mode' versus 'cold mode' accretion onto galaxies using steady-state cooling flow solutions and idealized 3D hydrodynamic simulations. We demonstrate that for the hot accretion mode to exist, the cooling time is required to be longer than the free-fall time near the radius where the gas is rotationally-supported, R_circ, i.e. the existence of the hot mode depends on physical conditions at the galaxy scale rather than on physical conditions at the halo scale. When allowing for the depletion of the halo baryon fraction relative to the cosmic mean, the longer cooling times imply that a virialized gaseous halo may form in halo masses below the threshold of ~10^12 M_sun derived for baryon-complete halos. We show that for any halo mass there is a maximum accretion rate for which the gas is virialized throughout the halo and can accrete via the hot mode of…
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