Galactic winds driven by cosmic-ray streaming
M. Uhlig (1,2), C. Pfrommer (3), M. Sharma (4), B. B. Nath (4,1), T., A. Ensslin (1), V. Springel (3,5) ((1) MPA Garching, (2) MPIDS Goettingen,, (3) HITS Heidelberg, (4) RRI Bangalore, (5) ZAU/ARI Heidelberg)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that cosmic-ray streaming can drive significant galactic winds, especially in dwarf galaxies, influencing star formation, baryon expulsion, and metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium.
Contribution
It introduces a novel implementation of cosmic-ray streaming in galaxy simulations and shows its critical role in wind formation and galaxy evolution.
Findings
CR streaming drives powerful winds in galaxies with M_200 < 10^{11} Msun.
Dwarf galaxy winds expel ~60% of baryons and suppress star formation by a factor of 5.
Predicted observable H-alpha and X-ray emissions from heated halo gas.
Abstract
Galactic winds are observed in many spiral galaxies with sizes from dwarfs up to the Milky Way, and they sometimes carry a mass in excess of that of newly formed stars by up to a factor of ten. Multiple driving processes of such winds have been proposed, including thermal pressure due to supernova-heating, UV radiation pressure on dust grains, or cosmic ray (CR) pressure. We here study wind formation due to CR physics using a numerical model that accounts for CR acceleration by supernovae, CR thermalization, and advective CR transport. In addition, we introduce a novel implementation of CR streaming relative to the rest frame of the gas. We find that CR streaming drives powerful and sustained winds in galaxies with virial masses M_200 < 10^{11} Msun. In dwarf galaxies (M_200 ~ 10^9 Msun) the winds reach a mass loading factor of ~5, expel ~60 per cent of the initial baryonic mass…
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