Bibcode
Stringer, M. J.; Bower, R. G.; Cole, S.; Frenk, C. S.; Theuns, T.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 423, Issue 2, pp. 1596-1609.
Fecha de publicación:
6
2012
Número de citas
25
Número de citas referidas
24
Descripción
The formation of galaxies is regulated by a balance between the supply
of gas and the rate at which it is ejected. Traditional explanations of
gas ejection equate the energy required to escape the galaxy or host
halo to an estimate for the energy yield from supernovae. This yield is
usually assumed to be a constant fraction of the total available from
the supernova, or is derived from the assumption of a consistent
momentum yield. By applying these ideas in the context of a cold dark
matter cosmogony, we derive a first-order analytic connection between
these working assumptions and the expected relationship between baryon
content and galaxy circular velocity, and find that these quick
predictions straddle recent observational estimates. To examine the
premises behind these theories in more detail, we then explore their
applicability to a set of gasdynamical simulations of idealized
galaxies. We show that different premises dominate to differing degrees
in the simulated outflow, depending on the mass of the system and the
resolution with which it is simulated. Using this study to anticipate
the emergent behaviour at arbitrarily high resolution, we motivate more
comprehensive analytic model which allows for the range of velocities
with which the gas may exit the system, and incorporates both momentum
and energy-based constraints on the outflow. Using a trial exit velocity
distribution, this is shown to be compatible with the observed baryon
fractions in intermediate-mass systems, but implies that current
estimates for low-mass systems cannot be solely accounted for by
supernova winds under commonly held assumptions.