Star Formation and Clumps in Cosmological Galaxy Simulations with Radiation Pressure Feedback
Christopher E. Moody, Yicheng Guo, Nir Mandelker, Daniel Ceverino,, Mark Mozena, David C. Koo, Avishai Dekel, Joel Primack

TL;DR
This study investigates the effects of radiation pressure feedback in cosmological galaxy simulations, showing it reduces star formation and alters the morphology and clump properties, aligning some features with observations.
Contribution
It introduces radiation pressure feedback into galaxy simulations, demonstrating its impact on star formation suppression and clump morphology, which was not thoroughly explored before.
Findings
Radiation pressure halves the global star formation rate.
Clump counts decrease for low-mass clumps with radiation pressure.
Simulated clumpy galaxies remain consistent with observations.
Abstract
Cosmological simulations of galaxies have typically produced too many stars at early times. We study the global and morphological effects of radiation pressure (RP) in eight pairs of high-resolution cosmological galaxy formation simulations. We find that the additional feedback suppresses star formation globally by a factor of ~2. Despite this reduction, the simulations still overproduce stars by a factor of ~2 with respect to the predictions provided by abundance matching methods for halos more massive than 5E11 Msun/h (Behroozi, Wechsler & Conroy 2013). We also study the morphological impact of radiation pressure on our simulations. In simulations with RP the average number of low mass clumps falls dramatically. Only clumps with stellar masses Mclump/Mdisk <= 5% are impacted by the inclusion of RP, and RP and no-RP clump counts above this range are comparable. The inclusion of RP…
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