Impact of H$_{\rm 2}$-driven star formation and stellar feedback from low-enrichment environments on the formation of spiral galaxies
Milena Valentini, Klaus Dolag, Stefano Borgani, Giuseppe Murante,, Umberto Maio, Luca Tornatore, Gian Luigi Granato, Cinthia Ragone-Figueroa,, Andreas Burkert, Antonio Ragagnin, Elena Rasia

TL;DR
This study examines how different models of molecular hydrogen formation and low-metallicity stellar feedback influence the evolution, morphology, and star formation regulation of simulated spiral galaxies, aligning better with observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the importance of the molecular hydrogen model and stellar feedback in shaping galaxy properties and provides insights for improving cosmological galaxy formation simulations.
Findings
The choice of H$_2$ model significantly affects galaxy morphology.
Low-metallicity feedback regulates star formation at high redshift.
The Krumholz et al. model yields more realistic ISM structures.
Abstract
The reservoir of molecular gas (H) represents the fuel for the star formation (SF) of a galaxy. Connecting the star formation rate (SFR) to the available H is key to accurately model SF in cosmological simulations of galaxy formation. We investigate how modifying the underlying modelling of H and the description of stellar feedback in low-metallicity environments (LMF, i.e. low-metallicity stellar feedback) in cosmological, zoomed-in simulations of a Milky Way-size halo influences the formation history of the forming, spiral galaxy and its final properties. We exploit two different models to compute the molecular fraction of cold gas (f): the theoretical model by Krumholz et al. (2009b) and the phenomenological prescription by Blitz & Rosolowsky (2006). We find that the model adopted to estimate f plays a key…
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