Cosmic-Ray Driven Galactic Winds from the Warm Interstellar Medium
Abstract
We study the properties of cosmic-ray (CR) driven galactic winds from the warm interstellar medium using idealized spherically symmetric time-dependent simulations. The key ingredients in the model are radiative cooling and CR-streaming-mediated heating of the gas. Cooling and CR heating balance near the base of the wind, but this equilibrium is thermally unstable, leading to a multiphase wind with large fluctuations in density and temperature. In most of our simulations, the heating eventually overwhelms cooling, leading to a rapid increase in temperature and a thermally-driven wind; the exception to this is in galaxies with the shallowest potentials, which produce nearly isothermal T ≈ 104 K winds driven by CR pressure. Many of the time-averaged wind solutions found here have a remarkable critical point structure, with two critical points. Scaled to real galaxies, we find mass outflow rates M somewhat larger than the observed star formation rate in low mass galaxies, and an approximately "energy-like" scaling M v esc-2. The winds accelerate slowly and reach asymptotic wind speeds of only 0.4 v esc. The total wind power is 1\% of the power from supernovae, suggesting inefficient preventive CR feedback for the physical conditions modeled here. We predict significant spatially extended emission and absorption lines from 104 - 105.5 K gas; this may correspond to extraplanar diffuse ionized gas seen in star-forming galaxies.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.