Clustered Supernovae Drive Powerful Galactic Winds After Super-Bubble Breakout
Drummond Fielding, Eliot Quataert, Davide Martizzi

TL;DR
This study demonstrates through simulations that clustered supernovae significantly enhance galactic wind power by enabling super-bubbles to break out of galactic discs, reducing radiative losses and ejecting substantial mass.
Contribution
It reveals that clustering of supernovae leads to more efficient galactic winds by facilitating super-bubble breakout, a novel insight into feedback mechanisms.
Findings
Clustered SNe drive more powerful galactic winds.
Super-bubbles break out before SNe cease, reducing radiative losses.
Wind energy fraction exceeds 20%, ejecting mass at star formation rates.
Abstract
We use three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations of vertically stratified patches of galactic discs to study how the spatio-temporal clustering of supernovae (SNe) enhances the power of galactic winds. SNe that are randomly distributed throughout a galactic disc drive inefficient galactic winds because most supernova remnants lose their energy radiatively before breaking out of the disc. Accounting for the fact that most star formation is clustered alleviates this problem. Super-bubbles driven by the combined effects of clustered SNe propagate rapidly enough to break out of galactic discs well before the clusters' SNe stop going off. The radiative losses post-breakout are reduced dramatically and a large fraction () of the energy released by SNe vents into the halo powering a strong galactic wind. These energetic winds are capable of providing strong preventative feedback…
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