Dense Molecular Gas: A Sensitive Probe of Stellar Feedback Models
Philip F. Hopkins (1), Desika Narayanan (2), Norman Murray (3), Eliot, Quataert (1) ((1) Berkeley, (2) Steward, (3) CITA)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the ratio of dense to total molecular gas, observable via specific tracers, effectively probes the strength and mechanisms of stellar feedback in galaxy simulations, aligning well with observations.
Contribution
It introduces high-resolution galaxy simulations with explicit stellar feedback models to predict dense gas tracers, providing a new method to test feedback mechanisms against observations.
Findings
Weak/no feedback models overpredict dense gas ratios.
Feedback models from stellar evolution match observed dense gas ratios.
Radiation pressure significantly influences dense gas tracers.
Abstract
We show that the mass fraction of GMC gas (n>100 cm^-3) in dense (n>>10^4 cm^-3) star-forming clumps, observable in dense molecular tracers (L_HCN/L_CO(1-0)), is a sensitive probe of the strength and mechanism(s) of stellar feedback. Using high-resolution galaxy-scale simulations with pc-scale resolution and explicit models for feedback from radiation pressure, photoionization heating, stellar winds, and supernovae (SNe), we make predictions for the dense molecular gas tracers as a function of GMC and galaxy properties and the efficiency of stellar feedback. In models with weak/no feedback, much of the mass in GMCs collapses into dense sub-units, predicting L_HCN/L_CO(1-0) ratios order-of-magnitude larger than observed. By contrast, models with feedback properties taken directly from stellar evolution calculations predict dense gas tracers in good agreement with observations. Changing…
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