Abstract
We use a suite of cooling halo simulations to study a new mechanism for rapid accretion of hot halo gas on to star-forming galaxies. Correlated supernova (SN) events create converging 'superbubbles' in the halo gas. Where these collide, the density increases, driving cooling filaments of low-metallicity gas that feed the disc. At our current numerical resolution (~20 pc; mgas = 4 × 104M⊙) we are only able to resolve the most dramatic events; however, as we increase the numerical resolution, we find that the filaments persist for longer, driving continued late-time star formation. This suggests that SN-driven accretion could act as an efficient mechanism for extracting cold gas from the hot halo, driving late-time star formation in disc galaxies. We show that such filament feeding leads to a peak star formation rate of ~3M⊙ yr-1, consistent with estimates for the Milky Way (MW). The filaments we resolve extend to ~50 kpc, reaching column densities of N ~ 1018 cm-2.We show that such structures can plausibly explain the broad dispersion in Mg II absorption seen along sightlines to quasars. Our results suggest a dual role for stellar feedback in galaxy formation, suppressing hot-mode accretion while promoting cold-mode accretion along filaments. Finally, since the filamentary gas has higher angular momentum than that coming from hot-mode accretion, we show that this leads to the formation of substantially larger gas discs.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Hobbs, A., Read, J., & Nicola, A. (2015). Growing galaxies via superbubble-driven accretion flows. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 452(4), 3593–3609. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1469
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.