Formation of Low Mass Stars in Elliptical Galaxy Cooling Flows
Abstract
X-ray emission from hot (T = 107 K) interstellar gas in massive elliptical galaxies indicates that 1010 Msun has cooled over a Hubble time, but optical and radio evidence for this cold gas is lacking. We provide detailed theoretical support for the hypothesis that this gas has formed into low luminosity stars. Within several kpc of the galactic center, interstellar gas first cools to T = 104 K where it is heated by stellar UV and emits the observed diffuse optical line emission. This cooling occurs at a large number (106) of isolated sites. After less than a solar mass of gas has accumulated (10-6 Msun/yr) at a typical cooling site, a neutral (HI or H2) core develops in the HII cloud where gas temperatures drop to T = 15 K and the ionization level (from thermal X-rays) is very low (x = 10-6). We show that the maximum mass of cores that become gravitationally unstable is only about 2 Msun. No star can exceed this mass. Fragmentation of collapsing cores produces a population of low mass stars with a bottom-heavy IMF and radial orbits. Gravitational collapse and ambipolar diffusion are rapid. The total mass of star-forming (dust-free) HI or H2 cores in a typical bright elliptical is only 106 Msun, below current observational thresholds.
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