Maximally Star-Forming Galactic Disks I. Starburst Regulation Via Feedback-Driven Turbulence
Eve C. Ostriker, Rahul Shetty

TL;DR
This paper presents a self-regulation model for starburst regions in galactic disks, where feedback-driven turbulence balances gravity, predicting star formation rates consistent with simulations and observations across different galaxy types.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative model linking feedback momentum flux to star formation rates, validated by simulations and galaxy data, highlighting turbulence's role in starburst regulation.
Findings
Star formation rate scales with the square of gas surface density.
Feedback-driven turbulence velocity dispersion is about 10 km/s.
Model predictions agree with observations for dense, turbulent gas regions.
Abstract
Star formation rates in the centers of disk galaxies often vastly exceed those at larger radii. We investigate the idea that these central starbursts are self-regulated, with the momentum flux injected to the ISM by star formation balancing the gravitational force confining the gas. For most starbursts, supernovae are the largest contributor to the momentum flux, and turbulence provides the main pressure support for the predominantly-molecular ISM. If the momentum feedback per stellar mass formed is p_*/m_* ~ 3000 km/s, the predicted star formation rate is Sigma_SFR=2 pi G Sigma^2 m_*/p_* ~0.1(Sigma/100Msun/pc^2)^2 Msun/kpc^2/yr in regions where gas dominates the vertical gravity. We compare this prediction with numerical simulations of vertically-resolved disks that model star formation including feedback, finding good agreement for gas surface densities Sigma ~ 10^2-10^3 Msun/pc^2. We…
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