Shocks, Star Formation, and the JWST
Antoine Gusdorf

TL;DR
This paper discusses the role of shocks in the interstellar medium, their impact on star formation and galaxy evolution, and highlights how JWST observations can advance understanding of these processes.
Contribution
It emphasizes the importance of interpreting JWST data to better understand interstellar shocks and their influence on the ISM, star formation, and cosmic ray acceleration.
Findings
Shocks are ubiquitous in the interstellar medium.
JWST will enable unprecedented observations of shock tracers.
Understanding shocks is key to comprehending galaxy evolution.
Abstract
The interstellar medium (ISM) is constantly evolving due to unremitting injection of energy in various forms. Energetic radiation transfers energy to the ISM: from the UV photons, emitted by the massive stars, to X- and -ray ones. Cosmic rays are another source of energy. Finally, mechanical energy is injected through shocks or turbulence. Shocks are ubiquitous in the interstellar medium of galaxies. They are associated to star formation (through jets and bipolar outflows), life (via stellar winds), and death (in AGB stellar winds or supernovae explosion). The dynamical processes leading to the formation of molecular clouds also generate shocks where flows of interstellar matter collide. Because of their ubiquity, the study of interstellar shocks is also a useful probe to the other mechanisms of energy injection in the ISM. This study must be conducted in order to understand the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Atomic and Molecular Physics
