First results from SMAUG: Characterization of Multiphase Galactic Outflows from a Suite of Local Star-Forming Galactic Disk Simulations
Chang-Goo Kim, Eve C. Ostriker, Rachel S. Somerville, Greg L. Bryan,, Drummond B. Fielding, John C. Forbes, Christopher C. Hayward, Lars Hernquist,, Viraj Pandya

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to analyze multiphase galactic outflows, revealing how outflow properties depend on galaxy characteristics and emphasizing the importance of modeling multiple thermal wind components.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based characterization of multiphase galactic outflows, highlighting the necessity of including at least two thermal wind components in models.
Findings
Cool outflow rates are 1-100 times the SFR, decreasing with surface density.
Hot outflows carry about 10% of the SFR in mass and significant energy and metals.
Outflow velocities scale weakly with star formation surface density, matching observations.
Abstract
Large scale outflows in star-forming galaxies are observed to be ubiquitous, and are a key aspect of theoretical modeling of galactic evolution in a cosmological context, the focus of the SMAUG (Simulating Multiscale Astrophysics to Understand Galaxies) project. Gas blown out from galactic disks, similar to gas within galaxies, consists of multiple phases with large contrasts of density, temperature, and other properties. To study multiphase outflows as emergent phenomena, we run a suite of ~pc-resolution local galactic disk simulations using the TIGRESS framework. Explicit modeling of the interstellar medium (ISM), including star formation and self-consistent radiative heating plus supernova feedback, regulates ISM properties and drives the outflow. We investigate the scaling of outflow mass, momentum, energy, and metal loading factors with galactic disk properties, including star…
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