Bibcode
Silich, Sergiy; Tenorio-Tagle, Guillermo; Muñoz-Tuñón, C.; Hueyotl-Zahuantitla, Filiberto; Wünsch, Richard; Palouš, Jan
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 711, Issue 1, pp. 25-31 (2010).
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3
2010
Journal
Citations
18
Refereed citations
11
Description
We present a detailed study of the hydrodynamics of the matter
reinserted by massive stars via stellar winds and supernovae explosions
in young assembling galaxies. We show that the interplay between the
thermalization of the kinetic energy provided by massive stars,
radiative cooling of the thermalized plasma, and the gravitational pull
of the host galaxy lead to three different hydrodynamic regimes. These
are: (1) the quasi-adiabatic supergalactic winds; (2) the bimodal flows,
with mass accumulation in the central zones and gas expulsion from the
outer zones of the assembling galaxy; and (3) the gravitationally bound
regime, for which all of the gas returned by massive stars remains bound
to the host galaxy and is likely to be reprocessed into further
generations of stars. Which of the three possible solutions takes place
depends on the mass of the star-forming region, its mechanical
luminosity (or star formation rate), and its size. The model predicts
that massive assembling galaxies with large star formation rates similar
to those detected in Submillimeter Common-User Bolometric Array sources
(~1000 M sun yr-1) are likely to evolve in a
positive star formation feedback condition, either in the bimodal or in
the gravitationally bound regime. This implies that star formation in
these sources may have little impact on the intergalactic medium and
result instead into a fast interstellar matter enrichment, as observed
in high redshift quasars.
Related projects
Starbursts in Galaxies GEFE
Starsbursts play a key role in the cosmic evolution of galaxies, and thus in the star formation (SF) history of the universe, the production of metals, and the feedback coupling galaxies with the cosmic web. Extreme SF conditions prevail early on during the formation of the first stars and galaxies, therefore, the starburst phenomenon constitutes a
Casiana
Muñoz Tuñón