Low and high velocity clouds produced by young stellar clusters
A. Rodriguez-Gonzalez, A. C. Raga, J. Canto

TL;DR
This paper models galactic fountain flows driven by super stellar cluster winds, showing how they can produce high-velocity clouds falling onto the galaxy, considering effects like cooling and gravity.
Contribution
It introduces a galactic fountain model with radiative nozzle flows, incorporating metallicity-dependent cooling and gravitational effects, to explain high-velocity cloud origins.
Findings
SSC winds of 500-800 km/s produce stalled nozzles at 1-15 kpc
Stalled flows generate cool clouds falling at observed velocities
Gravity and cooling influence nozzle flow stalling heights
Abstract
Intermediate and high velocity HI clouds rain onto the plane of our Galaxy. They are observed at heights of between 500 and 1500 pc, falling onto the Galactic plane at velocities from 50 to 140 km s. To explain the origin of these clouds, we present a galactic fountain model, driven by the wind from a super stellar cluster (SSC). We solve the equations for a steady, radiative de Laval nozzle flow. We consider two effects not considered previously in astrophysical nozzle flow models: cooling functions for different metallicities, and the direct action of the galactic gravitational field on the gas flowing along the nozzle. For an adiabatic nozzle flow, the gravity acting directly on the gas within the nozzle "stalls" the nozzle flow for initial wind velocities lower than the escape velocity from the Galaxy. For the same wind velocity, a radiative nozzle flow stalls at lower…
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