The relative impact of photoionizing radiation and stellar winds on different environments
Sebastian Haid, Stefanie Walch, Daniel Seifried, Richard W\"unsch,, Franti\v{s}ek Dinnbier, Thorsten Naab

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to compare how photoionizing radiation and stellar winds from massive stars influence different interstellar environments, revealing that their relative impacts depend on stellar mass and ambient medium properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach combining TreeRay radiation transfer with chemical networks to analyze stellar feedback effects in various ISM conditions.
Findings
Ionizing radiation dominates momentum in cold neutral medium.
Stellar winds dominate in warm ionized medium.
WNM shows a transition regime between wind and radiation effects.
Abstract
Photoionizing radiation and stellar winds from massive stars deposit energy and momentum into the interstellar medium (ISM). They might disperse the local ISM, change its turbulent multi-phase structure, and even regulate star formation. Ionizing radiation dominates the massive stars' energy output, but the relative effect of winds might change with stellar mass and the properties of the ambient ISM. We present simulations of the interaction of stellar winds and ionizing radiation of 12, 23, and 60 M stars within a cold neutral (CNM, = 100 cm), warm neutral (WNM, = 1, 10 cm) or warm ionized (WIM, = 0.1 cm) medium. The FLASH simulations adopt the novel tree-based radiation transfer algorithm TreeRay. With the On-the-Spot approximation and a temperature-dependent recombination coefficient, it is coupled to a chemical network with…
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