The origin of cold gas in the Circumgalactic Medium
Davide Decataldo, Sijing Shen, Lucio Mayer, Bernhard Baumschlager,, Piero Madau

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origins of cold gas in the circumgalactic medium of galaxies, revealing a transition from cold accretion dominance at high redshift to outflows and in-situ cooling at lower redshifts, using cosmological simulations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the history and origins of cold CGM gas across cosmic time, identifying dominant channels at different epochs through particle tracking in simulations.
Findings
At z>2, cold accretion streams dominate CGM cold gas (~80%).
At z<1, outflows and in-situ cooling contribute significantly to the cold CGM.
Thermally unstable gas with t_cool/t_ff<1 is prevalent up to 100 kpc, with rapid cooling times.
Abstract
The presence of cold ( K) gas in the circumgalactic medium (CGM) of galaxies has been confirmed both in observations and high-resolution simulations, but its origin still represents a puzzle. Possible mechanisms are cold accretion from the intergalactic medium (IGM), clumps embedded in outflows and transported from the disk, gas detaching from the hot CGM phase via thermal instabilities. In this work, we aim at characterizing the history of cold CGM gas, in order to identify the dominant origin channels at different evolutionary stages of the main galaxy. To this goal, we track gas particles in different snapshots of the SPH cosmological zoom-in simulation Eris2k. We perform a backward tracking of cold gas, starting from different redshifts, until we identify one of the followings origins for the particle: cold inflow, ejected from the disk, cooling down in-situ or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies
