The Fates of the Circumgalactic Medium in the FIRE Simulations
Z. Hafen (1), C.-A. Faucher-Giguere (1), D. Angles-Alcazar (2,3), J., Stern (1), D. Keres (4), C. Esmerian (5), A. Wetzel (6), K. El-Badry (7), T., K. Chan (4,8), N. Murray (9) ((1) Northwestern, (2) CCA, (3) University of, Connecticut, (4) UC San Diego, (5) U Chicago

TL;DR
This study uses FIRE-2 simulations to investigate the evolution and fate of the circumgalactic medium across different halo masses and redshifts, revealing complex gas dynamics and accretion modes.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the fate of CGM gas, including its transition from cold to hot accretion and the limited predictive power of metallicity for gas destiny.
Findings
Half of the CGM at z=2 ends in the galaxy or stars by z=0 in massive halos.
Most CGM mass at z=0.25 remains in the CGM at z=0 across all halo masses.
Over 80% of cool CGM gas in massive halos will eventually accrete onto galaxies.
Abstract
We analyze the different fates of the circumgalactic medium (CGM) in FIRE-2 cosmological simulations, focusing on the redshifts z=0.25 and z=2 representative of recent surveys. Our analysis includes 21 zoom-in simulations covering the halo mass range Mh(z=0) ~ 10^10 - 10^12 Msun. We analyze both where the gas ends up after first leaving the CGM (its "proximate" fate), as well as its location at z=0 (its "ultimate" fate). Of the CGM at z=2, about half is found in the ISM or stars of the central galaxy by z=0 in Mh(z=2) ~ 5e11 Msun halos, but most of the CGM in lower-mass halos ends up in the IGM. This is so even though most of the CGM in M_h(z=2) ~ 5e10 Msun halos first accretes onto the central galaxy before being ejected into the IGM. On the other hand, most of the CGM mass at z=0.25 remains in the CGM by z=0 at all halo masses analyzed. Of the CGM gas that subsequently accretes onto…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
