The angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside-out growth of spiral galaxies

Massive and diffuse haloes of hot gas (coronae) are important intermediaries between cosmology and galaxy evolution, storing mass and angular momentum acquired from the cosmic web until eventual accretion on to star-forming discs. We introduce a method to reconstruct the rotation of a galactic coron...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pezzulli, G, Fraternali, F, Binney, J
Format: Journal article
Published: Oxford University Press 2017
_version_ 1797068148255490048
author Pezzulli, G
Fraternali, F
Binney, J
author_facet Pezzulli, G
Fraternali, F
Binney, J
author_sort Pezzulli, G
collection OXFORD
description Massive and diffuse haloes of hot gas (coronae) are important intermediaries between cosmology and galaxy evolution, storing mass and angular momentum acquired from the cosmic web until eventual accretion on to star-forming discs. We introduce a method to reconstruct the rotation of a galactic corona, based on its angular momentum distribution (AMD). This allows us to investigate in what conditions the angular momentum acquired from tidal torques can be transferred to star-forming discs and explain observed galaxy-scale processes, such as inside-out growth and the build-up of abundance gradients. We find that a simple model of an isothermal corona with a temperature slightly smaller than virial and a cosmologically motivated AMD is in good agreement with galaxy evolution requirements, supporting hot-mode accretion as a viable driver for the evolution of spiral galaxies in a cosmological context. We predict moderately sub-centrifugal rotation close to the disc and slow rotation close to the virial radius. Motivated by the observation that the Milky Way has a relatively hot corona (T ≃ 2 × 10^6 K), we also explore models with a temperature larger than virial. To be able to drive inside-out growth, these models must be significantly affected by feedback, either mechanical (ejection of low angular momentum material) or thermal (heating of the central regions). However, the agreement with galaxy evolution constraints becomes, in these cases, only marginal, suggesting that our first and simpler model may apply to a larger fraction of galaxy evolution history.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T22:06:31Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:5059905e-1344-4836-b453-90c0316c76d9
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T22:06:31Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:5059905e-1344-4836-b453-90c0316c76d92022-03-26T16:12:59ZThe angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside-out growth of spiral galaxiesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:5059905e-1344-4836-b453-90c0316c76d9Symplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2017Pezzulli, GFraternali, FBinney, JMassive and diffuse haloes of hot gas (coronae) are important intermediaries between cosmology and galaxy evolution, storing mass and angular momentum acquired from the cosmic web until eventual accretion on to star-forming discs. We introduce a method to reconstruct the rotation of a galactic corona, based on its angular momentum distribution (AMD). This allows us to investigate in what conditions the angular momentum acquired from tidal torques can be transferred to star-forming discs and explain observed galaxy-scale processes, such as inside-out growth and the build-up of abundance gradients. We find that a simple model of an isothermal corona with a temperature slightly smaller than virial and a cosmologically motivated AMD is in good agreement with galaxy evolution requirements, supporting hot-mode accretion as a viable driver for the evolution of spiral galaxies in a cosmological context. We predict moderately sub-centrifugal rotation close to the disc and slow rotation close to the virial radius. Motivated by the observation that the Milky Way has a relatively hot corona (T ≃ 2 × 10^6 K), we also explore models with a temperature larger than virial. To be able to drive inside-out growth, these models must be significantly affected by feedback, either mechanical (ejection of low angular momentum material) or thermal (heating of the central regions). However, the agreement with galaxy evolution constraints becomes, in these cases, only marginal, suggesting that our first and simpler model may apply to a larger fraction of galaxy evolution history.
spellingShingle Pezzulli, G
Fraternali, F
Binney, J
The angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside-out growth of spiral galaxies
title The angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside-out growth of spiral galaxies
title_full The angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside-out growth of spiral galaxies
title_fullStr The angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside-out growth of spiral galaxies
title_full_unstemmed The angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside-out growth of spiral galaxies
title_short The angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside-out growth of spiral galaxies
title_sort angular momentum of cosmological coronae and the inside out growth of spiral galaxies
work_keys_str_mv AT pezzullig theangularmomentumofcosmologicalcoronaeandtheinsideoutgrowthofspiralgalaxies
AT fraternalif theangularmomentumofcosmologicalcoronaeandtheinsideoutgrowthofspiralgalaxies
AT binneyj theangularmomentumofcosmologicalcoronaeandtheinsideoutgrowthofspiralgalaxies
AT pezzullig angularmomentumofcosmologicalcoronaeandtheinsideoutgrowthofspiralgalaxies
AT fraternalif angularmomentumofcosmologicalcoronaeandtheinsideoutgrowthofspiralgalaxies
AT binneyj angularmomentumofcosmologicalcoronaeandtheinsideoutgrowthofspiralgalaxies