Resolving small-scale cold circumgalactic gas in TNG50
Dylan Nelson, Prateek Sharma, Annalisa Pillepich, Volker Springel,, Ruediger Pakmor, Rainer Weinberger, Mark Vogelsberger, Federico Marinacci,, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to reveal that small-scale, cold gas structures in the circumgalactic medium of massive galaxies are abundant, magnetic, and formed through thermal instability, matching observations.
Contribution
We demonstrate that high-resolution simulations can resolve small cold gas clouds in the CGM, highlighting the role of magnetic fields and thermal instability in their formation.
Findings
Cold clouds are numerous and small, with sizes around a kpc or less.
Magnetic pressure dominates over thermal pressure in cold clouds.
Simulation resolution affects the number and mass of cold clouds observed.
Abstract
We use the high-resolution TNG50 cosmological magnetohydrodynamical simulation to explore the properties and origin of cold circumgalactic medium (CGM) gas around massive galaxies (M* > 10^11 Msun) at intermediate redshift (z~0.5). We discover a significant abundance of small-scale, cold gas structure in the CGM of 'red and dead' elliptical systems, as traced by neutral HI and MgII. Halos can host tens of thousands of discrete absorbing cloudlets, with sizes of order a kpc or smaller. With a Lagrangian tracer analysis, we show that cold clouds form due to strong drho/rho >> 1 gas density perturbations which stimulate thermal instability. These local overdensities trigger rapid cooling from the hot virialized background medium at ~10^7 K to radiatively inefficient ~10^4 K clouds, which act as cosmologically long-lived, 'stimulated cooling' seeds in a regime where the global halo does not…
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