The Disruption of Giant Molecular Clouds by Radiation Pressure and the Efficiency of Star Formation in Galaxies
Norman Murray, Eliot Quataert, and Todd A. Thompson

TL;DR
This paper investigates how radiation pressure and other feedback mechanisms disrupt giant molecular clouds across different galaxy types, influencing star formation efficiency and the properties of star clusters.
Contribution
It identifies radiation pressure as the dominant cloud disruption mechanism in luminous starburst galaxies, extending understanding beyond local galaxy environments.
Findings
Radiation pressure dominates GMC disruption in high-redshift and ULIRG galaxies.
GMCs convert up to ~35% of their mass into stars in luminous starbursts.
Radiation pressure-driven bubbles stir the ISM to velocities matching observations.
Abstract
Star formation is slow, in the sense that the gas consumption time is much longer than the dynamical time. It is also inefficient; essentially all star formation in local galaxies takes place in giant molecular clouds (GMCs), but the fraction of a GMC converted to stars is very small, ~5%. In the most luminous starbursts, the GMC lifetime is shorter than the main sequence lifetime of even the most massive stars, so that supernovae can play no role in GMC disruption. We investigate the disruption of GMCs across a wide range of galaxies, from normal spirals to the densest starbursts; we take into account the effects of HII gas pressure, shocked stellar winds, protostellar jets, and radiation pressure produced by the absorption and scattering of starlight on dust grains. In the Milky Way, we find that a combination of three mechanisms, jets, HII gas pressure, and radiation pressure,…
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