Mechanical feedback from stellar winds with an application to galaxy formation at high redshift
Yvonne A. Fichtner, Luca Grassitelli, Emilio Romano-D\'iaz, Cristiano, Porciani

TL;DR
This study quantifies stellar wind feedback, including effects of rotation and binarity, and assesses its impact on galaxy formation at high redshift, finding limited influence on key galactic properties.
Contribution
It introduces new stellar wind feedback models accounting for rotation and binarity, and evaluates their effects on galaxy evolution simulations at high redshift.
Findings
Wind feedback increases at low metallicity.
Wind feedback reduces stellar mass and star formation burstiness.
Limited impact of wind feedback on overall galaxy properties.
Abstract
We compute different sets of stellar evolutionary tracks in order to quantify the energy, mass, and metals yielded by massive main-sequence and post-main-sequence winds. Our aim is to investigate the impact of binary systems and of a metallicity-dependent distribution of initial rotational velocities on the feedback by stellar winds. We find significant changes compared to the commonly used non-rotating, single-star scenario. The largest differences are noticeable at low metallicity, where the mechanical-energy budget is substantially increased. So as to establish the maximal (i.e. obtained by neglecting dissipation in the near circumstellar environment) influence of winds on the early stages of galaxy formation, we use our new feedback estimates to simulate the formation and evolution of a sub- galaxy at redshift 3 (hosted by a dark-matter halo with a mass of …
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