Dependence of Interstellar Turbulent Pressure on Supernova Rate
M. Ryan Joung (Princeton), Mordecai-Mark Mac Low (AMNH), Greg L. Bryan, (Columbia)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore how supernova rates influence the turbulent and thermal pressures in the interstellar medium, revealing nearly constant pressures and an isothermal effective equation of state.
Contribution
It introduces a calibrated subgrid model for turbulent pressure based on detailed stratified ISM simulations, aiding supernova feedback implementation in cosmological models.
Findings
Thermal and turbulent pressures are nearly constant at a given gas density.
Gas velocity dispersion remains 4-6 km/s across varying supernova rates.
Simulated HI line widths match observed values, and superbubble blow-outs occur at high supernova rates.
Abstract
Feedback from massive stars is one of the least understood aspects of galaxy formation. We perform a suite of vertically stratified local interstellar medium (ISM) simulations in which supernova rates and vertical gas column densities are systematically varied based on the Schmidt-Kennicutt law. Our simulations have a sufficiently high spatial resolution (1.95 pc) to follow the hydrodynamic interactions among multiple supernovae that structure the ISM. At a given supernova rate, we find that the mean mass-weighted sound speed and velocity dispersion decrease as the inverse square root of gas density, indicating that both thermal and turbulent pressures are nearly constant in the midplane, so the effective equation of state is isobaric. In contrast, across our four models having supernova rates that range from one to 512 times the Galactic supernova rate, the mass-weighted velocity…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
