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2007MNRAS.382.1481N - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 382, 1481-1493 (2007/December-3)
The role of thermal evaporation in galaxy formation.
NIPOTI C. and BINNEY J.
Abstract (from CDS):
We argue that thermal evaporation of cold gas by virial-temperature gas plays an important role in determining these phenomena. In less massive galaxies, thermal evaporation is not very efficient, so significant amounts of cold gas can reach the galaxy centre and fill a central core with newly formed stars, consistent with the young stellar ages of the cusps of ellipticals with power-law surface-brightness profiles. In more massive galaxies, cold gas is evaporated within a dynamical time, so during an accretion event star formation is inhibited, and a core in the stellar density profile produced by dissipationless dynamics cannot be refilled. In this picture, the different observed properties of active galactic nuclei in higher-mass and lower-mass ellipticals are also explained because in the former the central supermassive black holes invariably accrete hot gas, while in the latter they typically accrete cold gas.
An important consequence of our results is that at the present time there cannot be blue, star-forming galaxies in the most massive galactic haloes, consistent with the observed truncation of the blue cloud at ∼ L*.
Abstract Copyright: 2007 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2007 RAS
Journal keyword(s): conduction - galaxies: active - galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD - galaxies: formation - galaxies: structure
Simbad objects: 10
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