Bursty star formation feedback and cooling outflows
Teresita Suarez, Andrew Pontzen, Hiranya V. Peiris, Adrianne Slyz and, Julien Devriendt

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how bursty star formation drives gas outflows in galaxy halos, revealing that burst intensity influences the formation of cool gas and ion ratios in the circumgalactic medium.
Contribution
It demonstrates that bursty star formation significantly enhances cool gas formation in outflows and alters ion abundance ratios in the CGM, highlighting the importance of star formation history.
Findings
Bursty star formation leads to up to 60% cool gas in outflows.
Continuous star formation results in less than 5% cool gas.
Cooling effects depend strongly on star formation burstiness.
Abstract
We study how outflows of gas launched from a central galaxy undergoing repeated starbursts propagate through the circumgalactic medium (CGM), using the simulation code RAMSES. We assume that the outflow from the disk can be modelled as a rapidly moving bubble of hot gas at above disk, then ask what happens as it moves out further into the halo around the galaxy on scales. To do this we run 60 two-dimensional simulations scanning over parameters of the outflow. Each of these is repeated with and without radiative cooling, assuming a primordial gas composition to give a lower bound on the importance of cooling. In a large fraction of radiative-cooling cases we are able to form rapidly outflowing cool gas from in situ cooling of the flow. We show that the amount of cool gas formed depends strongly on the 'burstiness' of energy injection;…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
