Cooler and smoother -- the impact of cosmic rays on the phase structure of galactic outflows
Philipp Girichidis, Thorsten Naab, Micha{\l} Hanasz, Stefanie Walch

TL;DR
This study uses 3D magneto-hydrodynamical simulations to show that cosmic rays significantly influence galactic outflows, making them denser, colder, smoother, and more effectively accelerating gas at large heights.
Contribution
It demonstrates the critical role of cosmic rays in shaping the phase structure and dynamics of galactic outflows, incorporating non-equilibrium chemistry and relativistic fluid modeling.
Findings
Cosmic rays support denser, colder, and slower outflows.
CRs make outflows smoother at large heights.
CRs dominate gas acceleration beyond 1 kpc from the midplane.
Abstract
We investigate the impact of cosmic rays (CRs) on galactic outflows from a multi-phase interstellar medium with solar neighbourhood conditions. The three-dimensional magneto-hydrodynamical simulations include CRs as a relativistic fluid in the advection-diffusion approximation. The thermal and chemical state of the ISM is computed with a non-equilibrium chemical network. We find that CRs (injected with 10 \% of the supernova energy) efficiently support the launching of outflows and strongly affect their phase structure. Outflows leaving the midplane are denser (), colder (), and slower () if CRs are considered in addition to thermal SNe. The CR supported outflows are also smoother, in particular at larger heights ( above the midplane) without the direct impact of SN…
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