4.7 Article

Galactic inflow and wind recycling rates in the EAGLE simulations

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 497, Issue 4, Pages 4495-4516

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa2252

Keywords

galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; galaxies: haloes; galaxies: stellar content

Funding

  1. STFC [ST/K00042X/1, ST/P002293/1, ST/R002371/1, ST/S002502/1, ST/R000832/1]
  2. Durham University
  3. Vici grant from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) [639.043.409]
  4. Durham consolidated grant [ST/P000541/1]
  5. STFC [ST/P002293/1, ST/S003762/1, ST/R001006/1, ST/S003916/1, ST/P000541/1, ST/M007073/1, ST/M006948/1, ST/V002376/1, ST/V002384/1, ST/P003400/1, ST/R001014/1, ST/T001569/1, ST/T001348/1, ST/L000636/1, ST/M007006/1, ST/M007065/1, ST/S002502/1, ST/R00689X/1, ST/K00333X/1, ST/K00042X/1, ST/R000832/1, ST/V002635/1, ST/T00049X/1, ST/M007618/1, ST/R001049/1, ST/J005673/1, ST/P000673/1, ST/R002371/1, ST/P002447/1, ST/M006530/1, ST/T001372/1, ST/T001550/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The role of galactic wind recycling represents one of the largest unknowns in galaxy evolution, as any contribution of recycling to galaxy growth is largely degenerate with the inflow rates of first-time infalling material, and the rates with which outflowing gas and metals are driven from galaxies. We present measurements of the efficiency of wind recycling from the EAGLE cosmological simulation project, leveraging the statistical power of large-volume simulations that reproduce a realistic galaxy population. We study wind recycling at the halo scale, i.e. gas that has been ejected beyond the halo virial radius, and at the galaxy scale, i.e. gas that has been ejected from the interstellar medium to at least approximate to 10 per cent of the virial radius. Galaxy-scale wind recycling is generally inefficient, with a characteristic return time-scale that is comparable to or longer than a Hubble time, and with an efficiency that clearly peaks at the characteristic halo mass of M-200 = 10(12)M(circle dot). Correspondingly, the majority of gas being accreted on to galaxies in EAGLE is infalling for the first time. Recycling is more efficient at the halo scale, with values that differ by orders of magnitude from those assumed by semi-analytical galaxy formation models. Differences in the efficiency of wind recycling with other hydrodynamical simulations are currently difficult to assess, but are likely smaller. We find that cumulative first-time gas accretion rates at the virial radius are reduced relative to the expectation from dark matter accretion for haloes with mass M-200 < 10(12)M(circle dot), indicating efficient preventative feedback on halo scales.

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