Predictions for the Angular Dependence of Gas Mass Flow Rate and Metallicity in the Circumgalactic Medium
Celine Peroux (1,2), Dylan Nelson (3), Freeke van de Voort (4),, Annalisa Pillepich (5), Federico Marinacci (6), Mark Vogelsberger (7), Lars, Hernquist (8) ((1) ESO, Garching, Germany, (2) Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de, Marseille, France, (3) MPA, Garching, Germany, (4) Cardiff

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to reveal that gas inflow and outflow in the circumgalactic medium depend strongly on galaxy orientation, with inflow along the major axis and outflow along the minor axis, affecting metallicity distribution.
Contribution
It demonstrates, through simulations, the angular dependence of gas flow rates and metallicity in the CGM across different galaxy masses and compares two major simulation models.
Findings
Inflow is more substantial along the galaxy major axis.
Outflow is strongest along the galaxy minor axis.
CGM metallicity is higher along the minor axis.
Abstract
We use cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to examine the physical properties of the gas in the circumgalactic media (CGM) of star-forming galaxies as a function of angular orientation. We utilise TNG50 of the IllustrisTNG project, as well as the EAGLE simulation to show that observable properties of CGM gas correlate with azimuthal angle, defined as the galiocentric angle with respect to the central galaxy. Both simulations are in remarkable agreement in predicting a strong modulation of flow rate direction with azimuthal angle: inflow is more substantial along the galaxy major axis, while outflow is strongest along the minor axis. The absolute rates are noticeably larger for higher (log(M_* / M_sun) ~ 10.5) stellar mass galaxies, up to an order of magnitude compared to M^dot < 1 M_sun/yr/sr for log(M_* / M_sun) ~ 9.5 objects. Notwithstanding the different numerical and physical…
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