Does supernova feedback regulate the star formation rate in dwarf galaxies?
D. Whitworth, E. V\'azquez-Semadeni, J. Ballesteros-Paredes, G.O. G\'omez

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution dwarf galaxy simulations to investigate how supernova feedback influences star formation rates, finding that feedback limits dense gas formation rather than slowing collapse, with galactic rotation playing a key regulatory role.
Contribution
The paper provides new insights by showing supernova feedback mainly limits dense gas supply, challenging the idea that it primarily slows gravitational collapse in dwarf galaxies.
Findings
Supernova feedback increases SFR only modestly when turned off.
Theoretical maximum SFR exceeds measured SFR by nearly two orders of magnitude.
Galactic rotation may be the dominant regulator of star formation in dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
Stars form in cold, dense clouds embedded in galactic discs, but whether their formation is primarily regulated by gravitational collapse, turbulence, or stellar feedback remains unclear. Using four high-resolution dwarf galaxy simulations with and without supernova (SN) feedback and magnetic fields, we test how feedback regulates the supply of dense gas and, consequently, the star formation rate (SFR). Although the SFR does increase when SNe are turned off, this increase is only by a factor of a few. Instead, across all models, the theoretical maximum SFR originally proposed by Zuckerman and Palmer, defined as the ratio of the total dense gas mass to its mean free-fall time (), always exceeds the measured SFR by nearly two orders of magnitude. Moreover, the increase of the SFR in the case without SNe is accompanied by a nearly corresponding increase of the total…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
