Effects of Supernova Feedback on the Formation of Galaxy Disks
Cecilia Scannapieco (1), Patricia B. Tissera (2), Simon D.M. White (1), and Volker Springel (1) ((1) Max-Planck Institute for Astrophysics -, Garching; (2) Institute for Astronomy, Space Physics - Buenos Aires)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to demonstrate that supernova feedback is crucial for forming realistic galaxy disks, regulating star formation, and influencing galaxy properties across different mass scales.
Contribution
The paper extends previous isolated galaxy models to cosmological simulations, showing that supernova feedback can naturally produce disk galaxies without fine-tuning.
Findings
SN feedback regulates star formation and drives galactic winds.
Simulated galaxies develop extended, high-angular-momentum disks.
Feedback effects are stronger in smaller galaxies.
Abstract
We use cosmological simulations in order to study the effects of supernova (SN) feedback on the formation of a Milky Way-type galaxy of virial mass ~10^12 M_sun/h. We analyse a set of simulations run with the code described by Scannapieco et al. (2005, 2006), where we have tested our star formation and feedback prescription using isolated galaxy models. Here we extend this work by simulating the formation of a galaxy in its proper cosmological framework, focusing on the ability of the model to form a disk-like structure in rotational support. We find that SN feedback plays a fundamental role in the evolution of the simulated galaxy, efficiently regulating the star formation activity, pressurizing the gas and generating mass-loaded galactic winds. These processes affect several galactic properties such as final stellar mass, morphology, angular momentum, chemical properties, and final…
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