When Feedback Fails: The Scaling and Saturation of Star Formation Efficiency
Michael Y. Grudi\'c, Philip F. Hopkins, Claude-Andr\'e, Faucher-Gigu\`ere, Eliot Quataert, Norman Murray, Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s}

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations to explore how star formation efficiency scales with surface density in molecular gas disks, revealing saturation effects and feedback regulation across different galactic environments.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the scaling laws of star formation efficiency and highlights the importance of feedback processes in regulating star formation across diverse conditions.
Findings
Surface density predicts integrated star formation efficiency.
Star formation efficiency saturates at high surface density.
Feedback mechanisms regulate both instantaneous and integrated efficiencies.
Abstract
We present a suite of 3D multi-physics MHD simulations following star formation in isolated turbulent molecular gas disks ranging from 5 to 500 parsecs in radius. These simulations are designed to survey the range of surface densities between those typical of Milky Way GMCs (\sim 10^2 M_\odot\,pc^{-2}}) and extreme ULIRG environments (\sim 10^2 M_\odot\,pc^{-2}}) so as to map out the scaling of the cloud-scale star formation efficiency (SFE) between these two regimes. The simulations include prescriptions for supernova, stellar wind, and radiative feedback, which we find to be essential in determining both the instantaneous per-freefall () and integrated () star formation efficiencies. In all simulations, the gas disks form stars until a critical stellar surface density has been reached and the remaining gas is blown out by stellar feedback. We find…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Technologies
