Spectral shifting strongly constrains molecular cloud disruption by radiation pressure on dust
Stefan Reissl, Ralf S. Klessen, Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, Eric W., Pellegrini

TL;DR
This study uses detailed radiative transfer simulations to show that radiation pressure on dust is generally insufficient to disrupt molecular clouds, challenging the idea that it regulates star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive 3D radiative transfer analysis demonstrating the limited role of radiation pressure in cloud disruption across various conditions.
Findings
Radiation pressure rarely disrupts molecular clouds.
Clouds are optically thick to UV/optical but thin to far-IR, reducing momentum transfer.
Radiative force is much weaker than gravity in typical conditions.
Abstract
To test the hypothesis that radiation pressure from star clusters acting on dust is the dominant feedback agent disrupting the largest star-forming molecular clouds and thus regulating the star-formation process. We perform multi-frequency, 3D, RT calculations including scattering, absorption, and re-emission to longer wavelengths for clouds with masses of -M, with embedded clusters and a star formation efficiencies of 0.009%-91%, and varying maximum grain sizes up to 200m. We calculate the ratio between radiative force and gravity to determine whether radiation pressure can disrupt clouds. We find that radiation acting on dust almost never disrupts star-forming clouds. UV and optical photons to which the cloud is optically thick do not scatter much. Instead, they quickly get absorbed and re-emitted by at…
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