The effects of local stellar radiation and dust depletion on non-equilibrium interstellar chemistry
Alexander J. Richings, Claude-Andre Faucher-Giguere, Alexander B., Gurvich, Joop Schaye, Christopher C. Hayward

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution galaxy simulations to examine how local stellar radiation and dust depletion influence interstellar chemistry, affecting observable spectral lines and galaxy evolution, especially in dwarf galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces a combined model of non-equilibrium chemistry with local stellar radiation effects and dust depletion, providing new insights into galaxy ISM properties.
Findings
Fiducial model reproduces observed gas and line luminosity trends.
Uniform radiation field predicts fainter emission lines.
Metal depletion increases carbon and oxygen line luminosities.
Abstract
Interstellar chemistry is important for galaxy formation, as it determines the rate at which gas can cool, and enables us to make predictions for observable spectroscopic lines from ions and molecules. We explore two central aspects of modelling the chemistry of the interstellar medium (ISM): (1) the effects of local stellar radiation, which ionises and heats the gas, and (2) the depletion of metals onto dust grains, which reduces the abundance of metals in the gas phase. We run high-resolution (400 M per baryonic particle) simulations of isolated disc galaxies, from dwarfs to Milky Way-mass, using the FIRE galaxy formation models together with the CHIMES non-equilibrium chemistry and cooling module. In our fiducial model, we couple the chemistry to the stellar fluxes calculated from star particles using an approximate radiative transfer scheme, and we implement an empirical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
