Time-dependent galactic winds
E. A. Dorfi, D. Steiner, F. Ragossnig, D. Breitschwerdt

TL;DR
This paper presents hydrodynamical simulations of galactic winds driven by cosmic rays, demonstrating how halo structure influences wind evolution and explaining the observed cosmic ray energy spectrum features.
Contribution
The study introduces a time-dependent CR hydrodynamic model that incorporates self-generated MHD waves and halo structure effects on galactic wind evolution.
Findings
Wind breaks down after last supernova in structured halos
CR spectrum shaped by shock acceleration and post-acceleration
Halo structure critically influences wind sustainability
Abstract
Cosmic rays (CRs) are transported out of the galaxy by diffusion and advection due to streaming along magnetic field lines and resonant scattering off self-excited Magneto-Hydro-Dynamic (MHD) waves. Thus momentum is transferred to the plasma via the frozen-in waves as a mediator assisting the thermal pressure in driving a galactic wind. Galactic CRs (GCRs) are accelerated by shock waves generated in supernova remnants (SNRs), and they propagate from the disc into the halo. Therefore CR acceleration in the halo strongly depends on the inner disc boundary conditions. We performed hydrodynamical simulations of galactic winds in flux tube geometry appropriate for disc galaxies, describing the CR diffusive-advective transport in a hydrodynamical fashion (by taking appropriate moments of the Fokker-Planck equation) along with the energy exchange with self-generated MHD waves. Our…
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