Zooming in on the Circumgalactic Medium with GIBLE: Tracing the Origin and Evolution of Cold Clouds
Abstract
We use the GIBLE suite of cosmological zoom-in simulations of Milky Way-like galaxies with additional super-Lagrangian refinement in the circumgalactic medium (CGM) to quantify the origin and evolution of CGM cold gas clouds. The origin of z\,=\,0 clouds can be traced back to recent (\,2\,Gyr) outflows from the central galaxy (\,45\,\%), condensation out of the hot phase of the CGM in the same time frame (\,45\,\%), and to a lesser degree to satellite galaxies (\,5\,\%). We find that in-situ condensation results from rapid cooling around local over-densities primarily seeded by the dissolution of the previous generation of clouds into the hot halo. About \,10\,\% of the cloud population is long lived, with their progenitors having already assembled \,2\,Gyr ago. Collective cloud-cloud dynamics are crucial to their evolution, with coalescence and fragmentation events occurring frequently (\,20\,Gyr-1). These interactions are modulated by non-vanishing pressure imbalances between clouds and their interface layers. The gas content of clouds is in a constant state of flux, with clouds and their surroundings exchanging mass at a rate of \,103\,M\,Myr-1, depending on cloud relative velocity and interface vorticity. Furthermore, we find that a net magnetic tension force acting against the density gradient is capable of inhibiting cloud-background mixing. Our results show that capturing the distinct origins of cool CGM clouds, together with their physical evolution, requires high-resolution, cosmological galaxy formation simulations with both stellar and supermassive black hole feedback-driven outflows.
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