The Maximum Flux of Star-Forming Galaxies
Roland M. Crocker, Mark R. Krumholz, Todd A. Thompson, and Julie, Clutterbuck

TL;DR
This paper derives the maximum star formation rate and flux in galaxies driven by infrared radiation pressure, showing it limits extreme starburst activity and aligns with observed upper bounds.
Contribution
It presents a model for the maximum flux in star-forming galaxies constrained by radiation pressure, incorporating self-gravity, turbulence, and dust properties.
Findings
Galaxies have a maximum star formation rate per unit area of about 10^3 M_sun pc^-2 Myr^-1.
The critical flux for radiation pressure effects is approximately 10^{13} L_sun kpc^-2.
Most galaxies are below this flux limit, making radiation pressure effects generally negligible.
Abstract
The importance of radiation pressure feedback in galaxy formation has been extensively debated over the last decade. The regime of greatest uncertainty is in the most actively star-forming galaxies, where large dust columns can potentially produce a dust-reprocessed infrared radiation field with enough pressure to drive turbulence or eject material. Here we derive the conditions under which a self-gravitating, mixed gas-star disc can remain hydrostatic despite trapped radiation pressure. Consistently taking into account the self-gravity of the medium, the star- and dust-to-gas ratios, and the effects of turbulent motions not driven by radiation, we show that galaxies can achieve a maximum Eddington-limited star formation rate per unit area pc Myr, corresponding to a critical flux of …
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