The far-UV Interstellar Radiation Field in Galactic Disks: Numerical and Analytic Models
Shmuel Bialy

TL;DR
This paper models the far-UV interstellar radiation field in galactic disks, deriving formulas that relate its intensity to physical parameters like dust content and star formation, with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analytic formula for the FUV ISRF in galactic disks, incorporating key dimensionless parameters and identifying a critical dust-to-gas ratio affecting ISRF behavior.
Findings
ISRF increases with decreasing dust-to-gas ratio.
A critical dust-to-gas ratio determines whether ISRF is dust-limited or optically thin.
Low metallicity galaxies have a higher ISRF per star-formation rate.
Abstract
The intensity of the far-ultraviolet (FUV; 6-13.6 eV) interstellar radiation field (ISRF) in galaxies determines the thermal and chemical evolution of the neutral interstellar gas and is key for interpreting extragalactic observations and for theories of star-formation. We run a series of galactic disk models and derive the FUV ISRF intensity as a function of the dust-to-gas ratio, star-formation rate density, gas density, scale radius, and observer position. We develop an analytic formula for the median FUV ISRF flux. We identify two dimensionless parameters in the problem: (1) the dimensionless galactic radius, , which measures the radial extent of FUV sources (OB stellar associations) in the disk; (2) the opacity over the inter-source distance, , which measures the importance of dust absorption. These parameters encapsulate the dependence on all of the physical…
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