The impact of cosmic rays on dynamical balance and disc-halo interaction in Ldisc galaxies

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Abstract

Cosmic rays (CRs) are an important component in the interstellar medium, but their effect on the dynamics of the disc-halo interface (<10 kpc from the disc) is still unclear. We study the influence of CRs on the gas above the disc with high-resolution FIRE-2 cosmological simulations of late-type Lgalaxies at redshift z ∼0. We compare runs with and without CR feedback (with constant anisotropic diffusion κ ∼3 × 1029 cm2 s-1 and streaming). Our simulations capture the relevant disc-halo interactions, including outflows, inflows, and galactic fountains. Extra-planar gas in all of the runs satisfies dynamical balance, where total pressure balances the weight of the overlying gas. While the kinetic pressure from non-uniform motion dominates in the mid-plane, thermal and bulk pressures (or CR pressure if included) take over at large heights. We find that with CR feedback, (1) the warm (∼104 K) gas is slowly accelerated by CRs; (2) the hot (>5 × 105 K) gas scale height is suppressed; (3) the warm-hot (2 × 104-5 × 105 K) medium becomes the most volume-filling phase in the disc-halo interface. We develop a novel conceptual model of the near-disc gas dynamics in low-redshift Lgalaxies: with CRs, the disc-halo interface is filled with CR-driven warm winds and hot superbubbles that are propagating into the circumgalactic medium with a small fraction falling back to the disc. Without CRs, most outflows from hot superbubbles are trapped by the existing hot halo and gravity, so typically they form galactic fountains.

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Chan, T. K., Kereš, D., Gurvich, A. B., Hopkins, P. F., Trapp, C., Ji, S., & Faucher-Giguère, C. A. (2022). The impact of cosmic rays on dynamical balance and disc-halo interaction in Ldisc galaxies. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 517(1), 597–615. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac2236

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