In galaxies like the Milky Way, cold (~ 10^4 K) gas ejected from the disc by
stellar activity (the so-called galactic-fountain gas) is expected to interact
with the virial-temperature (~ 10^6 K) gas of the corona. The associated
transfer of momentum between cold and hot gas has important consequences for
the dynamics of both gas phases. We quantify the effects of such an interaction
using hydrodynamical simulations of cold clouds travelling through a hot medium
at different relative velocities. Our main finding is that there is a velocity
threshold between clouds and corona, of about 75 km/s, below which the hot gas
ceases to absorb momentum from the cold clouds. It follows that in a disc
galaxy like the Milky Way a static corona would be rapidly accelerated: the
corona is expected to rotate and to lag, in the inner regions, by ~ 80-120 km/s
with respect to the cold disc. We also show how the existence of this velocity
threshold can explain the observed kinematics of the cold extra-planar gas.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRAS.
Several typos correcte