How stellar feedback simultaneously regulates star formation and drives outflows
Christopher C. Hayward, Philip F. Hopkins

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytic model showing how stellar feedback regulates star formation and drives outflows in turbulent interstellar media, with outflows depending on gas fraction and galaxy properties, explaining galaxy evolution over cosmic time.
Contribution
The model links turbulence, feedback, and outflows, predicting outflow suppression in massive, low-redshift galaxies, and provides fitting functions for use in galaxy simulations.
Findings
Outflows are driven by feedback in low-density ISM patches.
Mass-loading factor inversely proportional to gas fraction and circular velocity.
Outflows are suppressed in massive galaxies at low redshift.
Abstract
We present an analytic model for how momentum deposition from stellar feedback simultaneously regulates star formation and drives outflows in a turbulent interstellar medium (ISM). Because the ISM is turbulent, a given patch of ISM exhibits sub-patches with a range of surface densities. The high-density patches are 'pushed' by feedback, thereby driving turbulence and self-regulating local star formation. Sufficiently low-density patches, however, are accelerated to above the escape velocity before the region can self-adjust and are thus vented as outflows. In the turbulent-pressure-supported regime, when the gas fraction is , the ratio of the turbulent velocity dispersion to the circular velocity is sufficiently high that at any given time, of order half of the ISM has surface density less than the critical value and thus can be blown out on a dynamical time. The resulting…
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