Molecular Cloud Evolution V. Cloud Destruction by Stellar Feedback
Pedro Colin, Enrique Vazquez-Semadeni, Gilberto C. Gomez

TL;DR
This study uses advanced numerical simulations to explore how stellar feedback from massive stars destroys molecular clouds, affecting star formation efficiency and cloud dynamics, with implications for understanding star formation regulation.
Contribution
It introduces a new stellar-particle formation algorithm and a simplified radiative-transfer model, providing more realistic insights into cloud destruction by stellar feedback.
Findings
Dense gas is evacuated around massive stars within 10-20 Myr.
Star formation continues in some regions despite feedback, reducing dense gas mass significantly.
Cloud virial parameters increase, indicating clouds become unbound due to feedback.
Abstract
We present a numerical study of the evolution of molecular clouds, from their formation by converging flows in the warm ISM, to their destruction by the ionizing feedback of the massive stars they form. We improve with respect to our previous simulations by including a different stellar-particle formation algorithm, which allows them to have masses corresponding to single stars rather than to small clusters, and with a mass distribution following a near-Salpeter stellar IMF. We also employ a simplified radiative-transfer algorithm that allows the stellar particles to feed back on the medium at a rate that depends on their mass and the local density. Our results are as follows: a) Contrary to the results from our previous study, where all stellar particles injected energy at a rate corresponding to a star of ~ 10 Msun, the dense gas is now completely evacuated from 10-pc regions around…
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