Conditions for Clump Survival in High-z Disc Galaxies
Avishai Dekel, Offek Tziperman, Kartick Sarkar, Omri Ginzburg, Nir, Mandelker, Daniel Ceverino, Joel Primack

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytic model to determine the conditions under which giant clumps in high-redshift disc galaxies survive or are disrupted, considering feedback, gravitational effects, and galaxy properties.
Contribution
It introduces a predictive survivability parameter for clumps and classifies long-lived clumps into sub-types based on gas retention and external influences.
Findings
Long-lived clumps have circular velocities around 50 km/s and masses above 10^8 solar masses.
L clumps are more common in galaxies with circular velocities over 200 km/s and high gas fractions.
Higher feedback levels decrease the likelihood of clump survival, especially with clustered supernovae and strong radiative feedback.
Abstract
We study the survival versus disruption of the giant clumps in high-redshift disc galaxies, short-lived (S) versus long-lived (L) clumps and two L sub-types, via analytic modeling tested against simulations. We develop a criterion for clump survival, with or without their gas, based on a predictive survivability parameter . It compares the energy sources by supernova feedback and gravitational contraction to the clump binding energy and losses by outflows and turbulence dissipation. The clump properties are derived from Toomre instability, approaching virial and Jeans equilibrium, and the supernova energy deposit is based on an up-to-date bubble analysis. For moderate feedback levels, we find that L clumps exist with circular velocities and masses . They are likely in galaxies with circular velocities ,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
