Feedback first: the surprisingly weak effects of magnetic fields, viscosity, conduction, and metal diffusion on galaxy formation
Kung-Yi Su, Philip F. Hopkins, Christopher C. Hayward, Claude-Andre, Faucher-Giguere, Dusan Keres, Xiangcheng Ma, Victor H. Robles

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to show that magnetic fields, conduction, viscosity, and metal diffusion have minimal impact on galaxy formation compared to stellar feedback, which is the dominant factor shaping the interstellar medium.
Contribution
It demonstrates that additional physics like MHD, conduction, viscosity, and metal diffusion have weak effects on galaxy formation when stellar feedback is explicitly modeled.
Findings
Stellar feedback is the primary regulator of star formation rates.
Additional physics have only ~10% effects on ISM properties.
Without feedback, galaxies collapse into dense, unphysical structures.
Abstract
Using high-resolution simulations with explicit treatment of stellar feedback physics based on the FIRE (Feedback in Realistic Environments) project, we study how galaxy formation and the interstellar medium (ISM) are affected by magnetic fields, anisotropic Spitzer-Braginskii conduction and viscosity, and sub-grid metal diffusion from unresolved turbulence. We consider controlled simulations of isolated (non-cosmological) galaxies but also a limited set of cosmological "zoom-in" simulations. Although simulations have shown significant effects from these physics with weak or absent stellar feedback, the effects are much weaker than those of stellar feedback when the latter is modeled explicitly. The additional physics have no systematic effect on galactic star formation rates (SFRs) . In contrast, removing stellar feedback leads to SFRs being over-predicted by factors of .…
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