Metal enrichment of the intracluster medium: SN-driven galactic winds
Verena Baumgartner, Dieter Breitschwerdt

TL;DR
This paper models how supernova-driven galactic winds expel metal-rich gas from galaxies into the intracluster medium, highlighting their role in cosmic chemical enrichment.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical model of superbubble expansion considering sequential supernova explosions and predicts metal ejection into the ICM.
Findings
Supernova-driven winds can effectively eject metals into the ICM.
The model estimates the conditions for galactic blow-out and metal enrichment.
Milky Way-like galaxies significantly contribute to ICM metal content.
Abstract
We investigate the role of supernova (SN)-driven galactic winds in the chemical enrichment of the intracluster medium (ICM). Such outflows on galactic scales have their origin in huge star forming regions and expel metal enriched material out of the galaxies into their surroundings as observed, for example, in the nearby starburst galaxy NGC 253. As massive stars in OB-associations explode sequentially, shock waves are driven into the interstellar medium (ISM) of a galaxy and merge, forming a superbubble (SB). These SBs expand in a direction perpendicular to the disk plane following the density gradient of the ISM. We use the 2D analytical approximation by Kompaneets (1960) to model the expansion of SBs in an exponentially stratified ISM. This is modified in order to describe the sequence of SN-explosions as a time-dependent process taking into account the main-sequence life-time of the…
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