4.7 Article

Cosmic ray driven outflows to Mpc scales from L* galaxies

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 501, Issue 3, Pages 3640-3662

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa3690

Keywords

stars: formation; galaxies: active; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; galaxies: intergalactic medium; cosmology: theory

Funding

  1. Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship
  2. NSF [1715847, 1455342, AST-1517491, AST-1715216, AST-1652522, AST-1715101]
  3. NASA [NNX15AT06G, JPL 1589742, 17-ATP17-0214, 17-ATP17-0067, HEC SMD-16-7592]
  4. STScI [HST-GO-14681.011, HST-GO-14268.022-A, HST-AR-14293.001-A]
  5. Research Corporation for Science Advancement

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The presence of cosmic rays can dominate and balance gravity in massive, low-redshift haloes, leading to cooler circumgalactic medium. With cosmic rays injected, galactic outflows are able to escape and form outflows in the intergalactic medium, altering the outflow morphology.
We study the effects of cosmic rays (CRs) on outflows from star-forming galaxies in the circum and intergalactic medium (CGM/IGM), in high-resolution, fully cosmological FIRE-2 simulations (accounting for mechanical and radiative stellar feedback, magnetic fields, anisotropic conduction/viscosity/CR diffusion and streaming, and CR losses). We showed previously that massive (M-halo greater than or similar to 10(11) M-circle dot), low-redshift (z less than or similar to 1-2) haloes can have CR pressure dominate over thermal CGM pressure and balance gravity, giving rise to a cooler CGM with an equilibrium density profile. This dramatically alters outflows. Absent CRs, high gas thermal pressure in massive haloes 'traps' galactic outflows near the disc, so they recycle. With CRs injected in supernovae as modelled here, the low-pressure halo allows 'escape' and CR pressure gradients continuously accelerate this material well into the IGM in 'fast' outflows, while lower-density gas at large radii is accelerated in situ into 'slow' outflows that extend to >Mpc scales. CGM/IGM outflow morphologies are radically altered: they become mostly volume-filling (with inflow in a thin mid-plane layer) and coherently biconical from the disc to >Mpc. The CR-driven outflows are primarily cool (T similar to 10(5) K) and low velocity. All of these effects weaken and eventually vanish at lower halo masses (less than or similar to 10(11) M-circle dot) or higher redshifts (z greater than or similar to 1-2), reflecting the ratio of CR to thermal + gravitational pressure in the outer halo. We present a simple analytical model that explains all of the above phenomena. We caution that these predictions may depend on uncertain CR transport physics.

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