Supernova-blast waves in wind-blown bubbles, turbulent, and power-law ambient media
Sebastian Haid, Stefanie Walch, Thorsten Naab, Daniel Seifried,, Jonathan Mackey, Andrea Gatto

TL;DR
This paper introduces an efficient model for supernova blast wave evolution in various ambient media, including turbulent and wind-blown bubbles, accurately predicting momentum injection and velocity distributions crucial for galaxy formation simulations.
Contribution
The authors develop a new computational method that captures supernova blast wave dynamics in complex media, aligning well with 3D simulation results and improving modeling efficiency.
Findings
Momentum injection varies with ambient density and turbulence.
Turbulent media can double the momentum input compared to uniform media.
Velocity distributions are broad, with high-velocity gas in low-density channels.
Abstract
Supernova (SN) blast waves inject energy and momentum into the interstellar medium (ISM), control its turbulent multiphase structure and the launching of galactic outflows. Accurate modelling of the blast wave evolution is therefore essential for ISM and galaxy formation simulations. We present an efficient method to compute the input of momentum, thermal energy, and the velocity distribution of the shock-accelerated gas for ambient media with uniform (and with stellar wind blown bubbles), power-law, and turbulent density distributions. Assuming solar metallicity cooling, the blast wave evolution is followed to the beginning of the momentum conserving snowplough phase. The model recovers previous results for uniform ambient media. The momentum injection in wind-blown bubbles depend on the swept-up mass and the efficiency of cooling, when the blast wave hits the wind shell. For power-law…
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