TY - JOUR
T1 - On the kinematic and thermodynamic state of clouds in complex wind-multicloud environments using a friends-of-friends analysis
AU - Antipov, A.
AU - Banda-Barragán, W. E.
AU - Birnboim, Y.
AU - Federrath, C.
AU - Gnat, O.
AU - Brüggen, M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society.
PY - 2025/7/1
Y1 - 2025/7/1
N2 - We investigate the interaction between a shock-driven hot wind and a cold multicloud layer, for conditions commonly found in interstellar and circumgalactic gas. We present a method for identifying distinct clouds using a friends-of-friends algorithm. This approach unveils novel detailed information about individual clouds and their collective behaviour. By tracing the evolution of individual clouds, our method provides comprehensive descriptions of cloud morphology, including measures of the elongation and fractal dimension. Combining the kinematics and morphology of clouds, we refine previous models for drag and entrainment processes. Our by-cloud analysis allows to discern the dominant entrainment processes at different times. We find that after the initial shock passage, momentum transfer due to condensation becomes increasingly important, compared to ram pressure, which dominates at early times. We also find that internal motions within clouds act as an effective dynamic pressure that exceeds the thermal pressure by an order of magnitude. Our analysis shows how the highly efficient cooling of the warm mixed gas at temperatures K is effectively balanced by the kinetic energy injected by the hot wind into the warm and cold phases via shocks and shear motions. Compression-driven condensation and turbulence dissipation maintain a multiphase outflow and can help explain the presence of dense gas in galaxy-scale winds. Finally, we show that applying our friends-of-friends analysis to H i-emitting gas and correcting for beam size and telescope sensitivity can explain two populations of H i clouds within the Milky-Way nuclear wind as structures pertaining to the same outflow.
AB - We investigate the interaction between a shock-driven hot wind and a cold multicloud layer, for conditions commonly found in interstellar and circumgalactic gas. We present a method for identifying distinct clouds using a friends-of-friends algorithm. This approach unveils novel detailed information about individual clouds and their collective behaviour. By tracing the evolution of individual clouds, our method provides comprehensive descriptions of cloud morphology, including measures of the elongation and fractal dimension. Combining the kinematics and morphology of clouds, we refine previous models for drag and entrainment processes. Our by-cloud analysis allows to discern the dominant entrainment processes at different times. We find that after the initial shock passage, momentum transfer due to condensation becomes increasingly important, compared to ram pressure, which dominates at early times. We also find that internal motions within clouds act as an effective dynamic pressure that exceeds the thermal pressure by an order of magnitude. Our analysis shows how the highly efficient cooling of the warm mixed gas at temperatures K is effectively balanced by the kinetic energy injected by the hot wind into the warm and cold phases via shocks and shear motions. Compression-driven condensation and turbulence dissipation maintain a multiphase outflow and can help explain the presence of dense gas in galaxy-scale winds. Finally, we show that applying our friends-of-friends analysis to H i-emitting gas and correcting for beam size and telescope sensitivity can explain two populations of H i clouds within the Milky-Way nuclear wind as structures pertaining to the same outflow.
KW - galaxies: haloes
KW - Galaxy: evolution
KW - hydrodynamics
KW - ISM: general
KW - radio lines: galaxies
KW - turbulence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105009359948&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/mnras/staf949
DO - 10.1093/mnras/staf949
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AN - SCOPUS:105009359948
SN - 0035-8711
VL - 540
SP - 3798
EP - 3817
JO - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
IS - 4
ER -