Self-Regulated Star Formation in Galaxies via Momentum Input from Massive Stars
Philip F. Hopkins (1), Eliot Quataert (1), Norman Murray (2) ((1), Berkeley, (2) CITA)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new numerical model of stellar feedback via momentum input from radiation, supernovae, and winds, showing it regulates star formation and reproduces observed galaxy properties.
Contribution
It presents a novel implementation of stellar feedback in galaxy simulations, demonstrating its role in self-regulating star formation and ISM structure.
Findings
Simulated galaxies reach a steady state with realistic star formation efficiencies.
Stellar feedback prevents runaway collapse and overproduction of stars.
Star formation rates are nearly independent of high-density star formation parameters.
Abstract
Feedback from massive stars is believed to play a critical role in shaping the galaxy mass function, the structure of the interstellar medium (ISM), and the low efficiency of star formation, but the exact form of the feedback is uncertain. In this paper, the first in a series, we present and test a novel numerical implementation of stellar feedback resulting from momentum imparted to the ISM by radiation, supernovae, and stellar winds. We employ a realistic cooling function, and find that a large fraction of the gas cools to <100K, so that the ISM becomes highly inhomogeneous. Despite this, our simulated galaxies reach an approximate steady state, in which gas gravitationally collapses to form giant molecular clouds (GMCs), dense clumps, and stars; subsequently, stellar feedback disperses the GMCs, repopulating the diffuse ISM. This collapse and dispersal cycle is seen in models of…
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