The Structure of the Interstellar Medium of Star Forming Galaxies
Philip F. Hopkins (Berkeley), Eliot Quataert (Berkeley), and Norman, Murray (CITA)

TL;DR
This paper develops numerical methods to include stellar feedback in galaxy simulations, revealing how different feedback processes regulate star formation and the interstellar medium's structure across various galaxy types.
Contribution
It introduces detailed feedback modeling in galaxy simulations, showing how different feedback mechanisms influence ISM phases and star formation regulation.
Findings
Galaxies self-regulate at Toomre Q~1 with a multi-phase ISM.
Feedback mechanisms operate on different scales, affecting GMCs and hot gas.
Star formation rate is primarily set by feedback, not just gas properties.
Abstract
We present numerical methods for including stellar feedback in galaxy-scale simulations. We include heating by SNe (I & II), gas recycling and shock-heating from O-star & AGB winds, HII photoionization, and radiation pressure from stellar photons. The energetics and time-dependence are taken directly from stellar evolution models. We implement these in simulations with pc-scale resolution, modeling galaxies from SMC-like dwarfs and MW analogues to massive z~2 starburst disks. Absent feedback, gas cools and collapses without limit. With feedback, the ISM reaches a multi-phase steady state in which GMCs continuously form, disperse, and re-form. Our primary results include: (1) Star forming galaxies generically self-regulate at Toomre Q~1. Most of the volume is in diffuse hot gas with most of the mass in dense GMC complexes. The phase structure and gas mass at high densities are much more…
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