TNG50 MW analogues reproduce global soft X-ray luminosity, inner surface brightness, emission measure and O VII absorption but show too-steep radial decline in X-ray brightness and 65% lower O VIII absorption than observed, indicating overly central feedback.
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4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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2026 4representative citing papers
Simulations constrain the mass scale for efficient ISM stripping of dwarf satellites to M_star ≲ 10^7 M_sun in MW-like halos, 0.5-1 dex below observed values, indicating additional quenching mechanisms are needed.
Low-angular-momentum test-particle models of HVCs originating at tens of kpc in a rotating halo reproduce observed kinematics and imply an accretion rate of several solar masses per year sufficient for long-term star formation.
Galactic wind advection with a peak velocity of ~700 km/s reproduces cosmic ray spectral hardening from hundreds of GV and softening from a few TV without diffusion breaks, predicts a hard spectrum (index ~2) at 3-5 kpc altitudes consistent with Fermi bubbles, and shows the wind maintains disk metal
citing papers explorer
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Probing the Hot Gaseous Halos of Milky Way-like Galaxies in the TNG50 simulation
TNG50 MW analogues reproduce global soft X-ray luminosity, inner surface brightness, emission measure and O VII absorption but show too-steep radial decline in X-ray brightness and 65% lower O VIII absorption than observed, indicating overly central feedback.
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Too Big to Quench? I. Constraining ISM Stripping of Dwarf Satellites in Milky Way-like Halos
Simulations constrain the mass scale for efficient ISM stripping of dwarf satellites to M_star ≲ 10^7 M_sun in MW-like halos, 0.5-1 dex below observed values, indicating additional quenching mechanisms are needed.
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Modeling the Accretion of High-Velocity Clouds from a Rotating Halo
Low-angular-momentum test-particle models of HVCs originating at tens of kpc in a rotating halo reproduce observed kinematics and imply an accretion rate of several solar masses per year sufficient for long-term star formation.
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Cosmic-Ray Spectra and Metal Budget Regulated by the Galactic Wind
Galactic wind advection with a peak velocity of ~700 km/s reproduces cosmic ray spectral hardening from hundreds of GV and softening from a few TV without diffusion breaks, predicts a hard spectrum (index ~2) at 3-5 kpc altitudes consistent with Fermi bubbles, and shows the wind maintains disk metal