English

Infall and accretion

Astrophysics 2007-07-10 v1

Abstract

Gas infall and accretion play a fundamental role in galaxy formation, and several processes of accretion are reviewed. In particular the cold accretion may solve to some extent the angular momentum problem in disk formation, while it is aggravated by mergers. Gas accretion is one of the main actor in secular evolution: it is required to account for recurrent bar formation, and to explain the feedback cycles of formation of bulges and black holes, with correlated masses. Infall is also required to fuel a regular and almost stationary star formation history. Star formation is quenched for galaxy in clusters when gas accretion is suppressed through stripping. The central brighter central galaxy can benefit however of gas accretion through cooling flows, moderated by AGN feedback. Hot and cold feedback scenarios can be considered, to account for a stationary cooling flow, and explain the filamentary CO and Halpha observed structures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0707.1277,
  title  = {Infall and accretion},
  author = {F. Combes},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0707.1277},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

12 pages, 5 figures, To appear in Pathways through an eclectic Universe, J. H. Knapen, T. J. Mahoney, and A. Vazdekis (Eds.), ASP Conf. Ser., 2007

R2 v1 2026-06-21T08:56:28.799Z