Modeling UV Radiation Feedback from Massive Stars: III. Escape of Radiation from Star-forming Giant Molecular Clouds
Jeong-Gyu Kim, Woong-Tae Kim, Eve C. Ostriker

TL;DR
This study uses radiation hydrodynamic simulations to analyze how ionizing and non-ionizing radiation escape from star-forming molecular clouds, revealing the influence of cloud properties and turbulence on escape fractions and their observational implications.
Contribution
The paper introduces new simulation-based insights into radiation escape mechanisms from molecular clouds, including simple estimation methods for observed dust optical depths.
Findings
Escape fraction reaches unity within a few dynamical times.
Cumulative escape fraction varies from 0.05 to 0.58 depending on cloud properties.
Turbulence-induced optical depth distribution broadens escape estimates.
Abstract
Using a suite of radiation hydrodynamic simulations of star cluster formation in turbulent clouds, we study the escape fraction of ionizing (Lyman continuum) and non-ionizing (FUV) radiation for a wide range of cloud masses and sizes. The escape fraction increases as H II regions evolve and reaches unity within a few dynamical times. The cumulative escape fraction before the onset of the first supernova explosion is in the range 0.05-0.58; this is lower for higher initial cloud surface density, and higher for less massive and more compact clouds due to rapid destruction. Once H II regions break out of their local environment, both ionizing and non-ionizing photons escape from clouds through fully ionized, low-density sightlines. Consequently, dust becomes the dominant absorber of ionizing radiation at late times and the escape fraction of non-ionizing radiation is only slightly larger…
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