Shock-multicloud interactions in galactic outflows -- II. Radiative fractal clouds and cold gas thermodynamics
Wladimir Banda-Barrag\'an, Marcus Br\"uggen, Volker Heesen, Evan, Scannapieco, J'Neil Cottle, Christoph Federrath, Alexander Y. Wagner

TL;DR
This paper uses 3D simulations to explore how radiative cooling and heating create a complex, multi-phase galactic wind with hot, warm, and cold gas phases, explaining observed high-velocity cold gas in outflows.
Contribution
It introduces detailed 3D shock-multicloud simulations including radiative processes, revealing a cycle of cloud fragmentation, mixing, cooling, and precipitation that sustains dense gas in galactic winds.
Findings
Hot gas exceeds 10^6 K in outflows
Most mass is in dense cold cloudlets and filaments
Cold gas precipitates from warm and mixed phases
Abstract
Galactic winds are crucial to the cosmic cycle of matter, transporting material out of the dense regions of galaxies. Observations show the coexistence of different temperature phases in such winds, which is not easy to explain. We present a set of 3D shock-multicloud simulations that account for radiative heating and cooling at temperatures between and . The interplay between shock heating, dynamical instabilities, turbulence, and radiative heating and cooling creates a complex multi-phase flow with a rain-like morphology. Cloud gas fragments and is continuously eroded, becoming efficiently mixed and mass loaded. The resulting warm mixed gas then cools down and precipitates into new dense cloudlets, which repeat the process. Thus, radiative cooling is able to sustain fast-moving dense gas by aiding condensation of gas from warm clouds and the hot wind. In the…
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