The impact of supernovae driven winds on stream-fed protogalaxies
Leila C. Powell, Adrianne Slyz, Julien Devriendt

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to investigate how supernova-driven winds influence low-mass protogalaxies at high redshift, revealing that such winds are weak in mass ejection but can enhance star formation through metal enrichment.
Contribution
First high-resolution simulation capturing individual supernova remnants in a cosmological context, demonstrating limited mass loss but potential positive feedback on star formation.
Findings
Galactic winds driven by SNe are high-velocity but carry little mass.
Cold gas inflow remains largely unaffected by SNe feedback.
SNe feedback can enhance star formation via metal enrichment.
Abstract
SNe driven winds are widely thought to be very influential in the high-redshift Universe, shaping the properties of the circum-galactic medium, enriching the IGM with metals and driving the evolution of low-mass galaxies. However, it is not yet fully understood how SNe driven winds interact with their surroundings in a cosmological context, nor is it clear whether they are able to significantly impact the evolution of low-mass galaxies from which they originate by altering the amount of cold material these accrete from the cosmic web. We implement a standard Taylor-Sedov type solution, widely used in the community to depict the combined action of many SN explosions, in a cosmological resimulation of a low mass galaxy at z =9 from the 'Nut' suite. However, in contrast with previous work, we achieve a resolution high enough to capture individual SN remnants in the Taylor-Sedov phase, for…
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