Regulation of Star Formation by a Hot Circumgalactic Medium
Christopher Carr, Greg L. Bryan, Drummond B. Fielding, Viraj Pandya,, and Rachel S. Somerville

TL;DR
This paper presents a gas-regulator model showing that galaxy star formation is mainly controlled by heating and cooling of the circumgalactic medium, with low mass-loading but high energy-loading winds aligning with observed galaxy properties.
Contribution
It introduces a simple galaxy evolution model emphasizing the role of the circumgalactic medium in regulating star formation through heating and cooling processes.
Findings
High energy-loading winds can reproduce observed galaxy relations.
Model is robust against variations in mass-loading but sensitive to energy-loading.
Self-regulation primarily occurs via CGM heating and cooling.
Abstract
Galactic outflows driven by supernovae (SNe) are thought to be a powerful regulator of a galaxy's star-forming efficiency. Mass, energy, and metal outflows (, , and , here normalized by the star formation rate, the SNe energy and metal production rates, respectively) shape galaxy properties by both ejecting gas and metals out of the galaxy and by heating the circumgalactic medium (CGM), preventing future accretion. Traditionally, models have assumed that galaxies self-regulate by ejecting a large fraction of the gas which enters the interstellar medium (ISM), even though such high mass-loadings are in growing tension with observations. To better understand how the relative importance of ejective (i.e. high mass-loading) vs preventative (i.e. high energy-loading) feedback affects the present-day properties of galaxies, we develop a simple gas-regulator model of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
