Cosmic Ray-Driven Galactic Winds with Resolved ISM and Ion-Neutral Damping
Brandon Sike, Timon Thomas, Mateusz Ruszkowski, Christoph Pfrommer, Matthias Weber

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore how cosmic rays influence galactic winds and star formation, highlighting the importance of transport models and ion-neutral damping effects.
Contribution
It introduces detailed CR transport modeling with ion-neutral damping in galactic wind simulations, showing their impact on feedback and outflow properties.
Findings
CR-driven winds can supply energy to large-scale outflows.
Ion-neutral damping reduces CR impact on star formation.
CRs can accelerate warm gas but have limited effect on cold and hot gas.
Abstract
Feedback processes in galaxies dictate their structure and evolution. Baryons can be cycled through stars, which inject energy into the interstellar medium (ISM) in supernova explosions, fueling multiphase galactic winds. Cosmic rays (CRs) accelerated at supernova remnants are an important component of feedback. CRs can effectively contribute to wind driving; however, their impact heavily depends on the assumed CR transport model. We run high-resolution "tallbox" simulations of a patch of a galactic disk using the moving mesh magnetohydrodynamics code AREPO, including varied CR implementations and the CRISP non-equilibrium thermochemistry model. We characterize the impact of CR feedback on star formation and multiphase outflows. While CR-driven winds are able to supply energy to a global-scale wind, a purely thermal wind loses most of its energy by the time it reaches 3 kpc above the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
