Cosmic ray driven outflows from high redshift galaxies
Saumyadip Samui, Kandaswamy Subramanian, Raghunathan Srianand

TL;DR
This paper investigates cosmic ray-driven winds in high redshift galaxies, demonstrating their ability to generate significant outflows that influence galaxy evolution and intergalactic medium enrichment, even with radiative cooling effects.
Contribution
It presents a new model for cosmic ray-driven galactic winds in high redshift galaxies, including solutions with realistic gravitational potentials and magnetic fields.
Findings
Cosmic rays can drive winds even when thermal gas cools radiatively.
Wind speed correlates with galaxy's circular velocity.
Mass outflow rate per star formation rate (eta_w) is 0.2-0.5 for massive galaxies.
Abstract
We study winds in high redshift galaxies driven by a relativistic cosmic ray (proton) component in addition to the hot thermal gas component. Cosmic rays (CRs) are likely to be efficiently generated in supernova shocks inside galaxies. We obtain solutions of such CR driven free winds in a gravitational potential of the NFW form, relevant to galaxies. Cosmic rays naturally provide the extra energy and/or momentum input to the system, needed for a transonic wind solution in a gas with adiabatic index . We show that CRs can effectively drive winds even when the thermal energy of the gas is lost due to radiative cooling. These wind solutions predict an asymptotic wind speed closely related to the circular velocity of the galaxy. Furthermore, the mass outflow rate per unit star formation rate (eta_w) is predicted to be ~ 0.2-0.5 for massive galaxies, with masses $M \sim…
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