Galactic inflow and wind recycling rates in the EAGLE simulations
Peter D. Mitchell, Joop Schaye, Richard G. Bower

TL;DR
This paper uses the EAGLE simulation to measure galactic wind recycling rates, revealing that recycling is generally inefficient and less significant for galaxy growth than first-time accretion, especially at lower halo masses.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurements of wind recycling efficiency at both halo and galaxy scales within the EAGLE simulation, highlighting differences from semi-analytic models and other simulations.
Findings
Galaxy-scale recycling is inefficient with long return times.
Recycling efficiency peaks at halo mass of 10^12 M_sun.
First-time accretion dominates galaxy growth, especially at lower halo masses.
Abstract
The role of galactic wind recycling represents one of the largest unknowns in galaxy evolution, as any contribution of recycling to galaxy growth is largely degenerate with the inflow rates of first-time infalling material, and the rates with which outflowing gas and metals are driven from galaxies. We present measurements of the efficiency of wind recycling from the EAGLE cosmological simulation project, leveraging the statistical power of large-volume simulations that reproduce a realistic galaxy population. We study wind recycling at the halo scale, i.e. gas that has been ejected beyond the halo virial radius, and at the galaxy scale, i.e. gas that has been ejected from the ISM to at least of the virial radius (thus excluding smaller-scale galactic fountains). Galaxy-scale wind recycling is generally inefficient, with a characteristic return timescale that is…
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