The effect of feedback and reionization on star formation in low-mass dwarf galaxy haloes
Christine M. Simpson, Greg L. Bryan, Kathryn V. Johnston, Britton D., Smith, Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, Sanjib Sharma, Jason Tumlinson

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how reionization and supernova feedback influence star formation in low-mass dwarf galaxy halos, revealing reionization's dominant role in gas expulsion and its impact on stellar mass and metallicity.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of the combined effects of reionization and supernova feedback on dwarf galaxy evolution, highlighting their relative importance and resulting properties.
Findings
Reionization expels most gas from dwarf halos.
Supernova feedback disperses dense, cold gas in the core.
Timing of reionization significantly affects stellar mass.
Abstract
We simulate the evolution of a 10^9 Msun dark matter halo in a cosmological setting with an adaptive-mesh refinement code as an analogue to local low luminosity dwarf irregular and dwarf spheroidal galaxies. The primary goal of our study is to investigate the roles of reionization and supernova feedback in determining the star formation histories of low mass dwarf galaxies. We include a wide range of physical effects, including metal cooling, molecular hydrogen formation and cooling, photoionization and photodissociation from a metagalactic background, a simple prescription for self-shielding, star formation, and a simple model for supernova driven energetic feedback. We carry out simulations excluding each major effect in turn. We find that reionization is primarily responsible for expelling most of the gas in our simulations, but that supernova feedback is required to disperse the…
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