Efficacy of early stellar feedback in low gas surface density environments
Abstract
We present a suite of high resolution radiation hydrodynamic simulations of a small patch (1 \ kpc2) of the inter-stellar medium (ISM) performed with Arepo-RT, with the aim to quantify the efficacy of various feedback processes like supernovae explosions (SNe), photoheating and radiation pressure in low gas surface density galaxies ( gas 10 \ M \ pc-2). We show that radiation fields decrease the star formation rate and therefore the total stellar mass formed by a factor of 2. This increases the gas depletion timescale and brings the simulated Kennicutt-Schmidt relation closer to the observational estimates. Radiation feedback coupled with SNe is more efficient at driving outflows with the mass and energy loading increasing by a factor of 10. This increase is mainly driven by the additional entrainment of medium density (10-2 ≤ n< 1 \ cm-3), warm (300 \ K≤ T<8000 \ K) material. Therefore including radiation fields tends to launch colder, denser and higher mass and energy loaded outflows. This is because photoheating of the high density gas around a newly formed star over-pressurises the region, causing it to expand. This reduces the ambient density in which the SNe explode by a factor of 10-100 which in turn increases their momentum output by a factor of 1.5-2.5. Finally, we note that in these low gas surface density environments, radiation fields primarily impact the ISM via photoheating and radiation pressure has only a minimal role in regulating star formation.
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